Journalism in Britain is paradoxical. The number of journalists is growing despite declining sales of newspapers and financial pressures in broadcast media. Public opinion surveys indicate that journalists are not respected, yet young people are eager to take up media careers. A typical entrant to journalism is now a university graduate, and university-based training is expanding. At the same time, the training system is in chaos and many practitioners continue to claim that the skills needed are more practical than intellectual. Even in today's "knowledge society", journalism in Britain has neither the institutional structures nor the self-identity of a profession. In occupational ideology and mythology, journalists (even in serious and po...
The current combination of economic recession and info-technological revolution is drastically affe...
Professional journalism is under extraordinary pressure: not only are its traditional business model...
In the last two years, profound changes in the landscape of media ownership have disrupted the conte...
Based on one of the most comprehensive surveys of UK journalists ever carried out, this report descr...
Many British newspapers proclaim strongly partisan political and moral positions, with headlines suc...
It should be possible to link the health of journalism with the training of journalists. Yet even wi...
Britain has been at the forefront of journalism for centuries. Itprovided the beginnings of journali...
Journalism training must not only equip students with the practical skills essential for their caree...
Traditional journalism is indeed in crisis. In the face of corporate conglomeration and economic rat...
Journalism in the UK straddles the divide between high- and middle-skilled employment. Since the 197...
Journalism education in the UK has experienced a pattern of explosive growth since the 1970s without...
This chapter aims to answer the question of how the professionalisation of journalism is experienced...
Over three-quarters of the journalists entering the trade today did not receive professional trainin...
Belgium is a victim of the small size of its linguistic markets and cumulates the factors of fragili...
In journalism today, there are 14 schools which are recognized by the profession and sketch the cont...
The current combination of economic recession and info-technological revolution is drastically affe...
Professional journalism is under extraordinary pressure: not only are its traditional business model...
In the last two years, profound changes in the landscape of media ownership have disrupted the conte...
Based on one of the most comprehensive surveys of UK journalists ever carried out, this report descr...
Many British newspapers proclaim strongly partisan political and moral positions, with headlines suc...
It should be possible to link the health of journalism with the training of journalists. Yet even wi...
Britain has been at the forefront of journalism for centuries. Itprovided the beginnings of journali...
Journalism training must not only equip students with the practical skills essential for their caree...
Traditional journalism is indeed in crisis. In the face of corporate conglomeration and economic rat...
Journalism in the UK straddles the divide between high- and middle-skilled employment. Since the 197...
Journalism education in the UK has experienced a pattern of explosive growth since the 1970s without...
This chapter aims to answer the question of how the professionalisation of journalism is experienced...
Over three-quarters of the journalists entering the trade today did not receive professional trainin...
Belgium is a victim of the small size of its linguistic markets and cumulates the factors of fragili...
In journalism today, there are 14 schools which are recognized by the profession and sketch the cont...
The current combination of economic recession and info-technological revolution is drastically affe...
Professional journalism is under extraordinary pressure: not only are its traditional business model...
In the last two years, profound changes in the landscape of media ownership have disrupted the conte...