The second LEMEL symposium, titled “Online Media, European Actors and Discourse” is now accepting submissions. The event will be held at the Gennevilliers campus of the Cergy-Pontoise University on the … Continued
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ARTICLE: Quality press increases voter turnout
Exposure to high quality newspapers increases voter turnout in elections, write Florian Arendt, of University of Munich, and Cornelia Brandtner, of Dresden University of Technology. The authors studied 460 Austrians’ … Continued
CFP: The 2. Press/Politics conference seeks papers
The second iteration of the annual Press/Politics conference, arranged by the titular International Journal of Press/Politics, is now looking for article propositions. The event itself will be held at the … Continued
ARTICLE: Value of news in everyday life
In a world with a wide range of possibilities to consume news for free, paying for news can be considered an act of civic engagement, claim Joëlle Swart, Chris Peters and Marcel Broersma. They analyze … Continued
ARTICLE: Journalism students and online journalism
Mads Kæmsgaard Eberhols, Jannie Møller Hartley and Maria Bendix Olsen of Roskilde University study journalism students’ experiences in a course that simulates an online newsroom. The scholars explored the dilemmas that students experience “working” as … Continued
CFP: Photojournalism and editorial processes
Nordicom Review is calling for papers for a special issue that examines photojournalism in editorial processes in a period of paradigmatic change. The aim of the issue is to reach a … Continued
Latest issue of Communication & Society published
New issue of quarterly published Communication & Society is out now. The journal’s aim is to make research contributions to the field of communication from a variety of perspectives. The new … Continued
CFP: Journalism, diaspora and conflict
Editors are calling for chapters for a book called Journalism, Diaspora and Conflict. How diasporic media and journalists perceive their roles in conflict situation? The book aims to capture this and … Continued
New Journalism Practice issue is out now
Latest special issue of Journalism Practice called Entrepreneurial Journalism is now published. The magazine provides opportunities for reflective, critical and research-based studies focused on the professional practice of journalism. This issues articles study news … Continued
ARTICLE: Transmedia strategies in journalism
Multiplatform news media production is already a reality that will inevitably grow and improve. In their newly published article Renira Rampazzo Gambarato and Lorena Peret Teixeira Tárcia present a model of analysis … Continued
CFP: Freedom of speech in the wake of Paris attacks
A workshop titled “Freedom and Control of Expression in the Digital Aftermath of the 2015 Paris Attacks” is looking for paper proposals. The event will be held at the Institute … Continued
ARTICLE: Profitable is not the same as sustainable
Defining the “sustainability” of news ventures on the basis of their financial profitability may be misleading, writes Naomi Sakr, of University of Westminster. Sakr interviewed the staff of three Egyptian … Continued
ARTICLE: Swedish arts journalism loses autonomy
Arts journalism in Sweden is losing its autonomy and becoming more directed by the general logic of commercial journalism, writes Cristine Sarrimo, of Lund University. Sarrimo interviewed three veteran journalists … Continued
PAPER: The role of Journalism in the Digital Age
More and more consumers of news are becoming contributors to and creators of news. Do journalists think that Networked Journalism, a concept where professionals and amateurs are working together … Continued
ARTICLE: Trust issues in online journalism
Polls indicate that trust in journalism, especially online journalism, is rather low in Western societies. To assess the difference in offline and online trust, Katherine M. Grosser develops a model … Continued
ARTICLE: A study in rejection of objectivity
The Dutch news website De Correspondent has pointedly and successfully rejected the journalistic norm of objectivity, writes Frank Harbers, of University of Groningen. Harbers analyzed 63 stories published on the … Continued
BOOK: Russian, Polish and Swedish journalists compared
Russian, Polish and Swedish journalists can be seen as members of a shared community, write Gunnar Nygren, of Södertorn University, and Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska, of University of Wrocław. They present the … Continued
ARTICLE: Greek press shows NGO’s in new light
The way non-governmental organizations (NGO’s) are depicted by the Greek newspapers has changed since 2004, write Christos Frangonikolopoulos, of Aristotle University Thessaloniki, and Stamatis Poulakidakos, of National and Kapodistrian University … Continued
REPORT: E-mail newsletters are not obsolete
Contrary to the common belief, e-mailed newsletters are not outdated, but rather making a “come-back”, writes Charlotte Fagerlund, a London School of Economics fellow and a journalist for the newspaper … Continued
Soft censorship on the rise in Hungary
Media in Hungary is suffering from more or less veiled censorship, recent reports state. Zoltan Sipos, writing on the Index on Censorship website, goes through the 15 violations reported to … Continued
ARTICLE: 2014 Scottish independence referendum in the press
Marina Dekavalla, of University of Stirling, United Kingdom, explores the framing of referendum campaigns in the press and its relationship to the framing of elections. She draws from an empirical analysis of the … Continued
BOOK: Journalists’ organizations never apolitical
International journalists’ organizations and movements are always, to some part, molded by their political surroundings, write Kaarle Nordenstreng, of University of Tampere (emeritus), and Frank Beyersdorf, of both the Free … Continued
ARTICLE: Computational in journalism
What can and cannot be calculated is not merely a technical question, it is also a deeply social, cultural, political and economic one, writes Taina Bucher, of University of Copenhagen, Denmark. … Continued
ARTICLE: BBC journalists not always neutral
The anchors of BBC’s daily radio news show Today sometimes violate their own editorial rules on impartiality, write Philip Mitchell, of University of South Wales, and James Stewart, of Cardiff … Continued
ARTICLE: Journalists reel back on social media
Journalists are decreasing their efforts to engage with their audience on Facebook, writes Anders Olof Larsson, of Westerdals Oslo School of Arts, Communication and Technology. Larsson algorithmically captured the activities … Continued
ARTICLE: Foreign reporting more stable than thought
The working conditions of foreign correspondents is not changing quite as much as is thought, write Michael Brüggemann, of University of Zurich, Guido Keel, of Zurich University of Applied Sciences, … Continued
ARTICLE: Financial press free to push for reforms
Financial newspapers have historically had more freedom of speech than other forms of journalism, writes Ángel Arrese of University of Navarra. According to Arrese, this relative freedom has allowed the … Continued
REPORT: Robo-journalists and bendy smartphones
The Reuters Institute is launching its new Digital News Project with a set of technology and industry predictions for 2016. Digital News Project is an international research project examining cross-national developments … Continued
ARTICLE: A piece of Turkish literary journalism history
Turkish weekly journal Servet-i Fünun (Wealth of the Sciences) began publishing in 1891 and attracted contributions from the best Turkish writers until closing down in 1944. At the time weekly journals were a platform … Continued
ARTICLE: “Slow journalism” should be a plural
“Slow journalism” as a concept should be allowed certain fuzziness, writes Erik Neveu, of Rennes Institute of Political Studies. The author departs his argument from Megan Le Masurier‘s article on … Continued




























