This article reports on job loss among Canadian journalists between 2012 and 2016. Building on Australian research on the aftermath of job loss in journalism, this article examines the experiences of 197 journalists who were laid off or who took a buyout, voluntarily or not, due to corporate restructuring in Canadian media (both French and English). To date, no scholarly research in Canada has examined what happens to journalists after they are laid off, including the personal and professional experiences journalists undergo when they lose their job and seek a new one, or the implications of these experiences for Canadian journalism in general. Overall, in a result that mirrors laid-off Australian journalists’ experiences of re-employment, ...
articles, “Downsizing of America, ” arguing that more intense competition and computer-based technol...
Research on journalists and journalistic work has focused on journalists with permanent, full-time e...
This study uses the question, ‘what makes a freelancer specifically a journalist’ as a starting poin...
Modeled on the “New Beats: A study of Australian Journalism Redundancies” project (2014–17), the pur...
Background: There is a broad recognition that journalism is facing difficult times in Canada and int...
Rapid change in the news industry and the prevalence of layoffs, buyouts, and closings have led many...
There is an industrial revolution taking place in the media sphere, and it is a result of digitalisa...
In Australia and beyond, journalism is reportedly an industry in crisis, a crisis exacerbated by CO...
Severe contractions in the Australian media landscape have led to a loss of jobs in major metropolit...
While considerable academic attention has been paid to the effect of industry turbulence on journali...
This study examines former newspaper photographers\u27 experience with being laid-off from their sta...
For the past two decades, understandings of the scale of digital disruption in journalism work in po...
Print newspapers are in an age of disruption that has radically affected readership, news consumptio...
As media companies grow in profits and economic significance, workers in these industries are experi...
Due to rising unemployment levels, researchers have begun to investigate how corporations handle lay...
articles, “Downsizing of America, ” arguing that more intense competition and computer-based technol...
Research on journalists and journalistic work has focused on journalists with permanent, full-time e...
This study uses the question, ‘what makes a freelancer specifically a journalist’ as a starting poin...
Modeled on the “New Beats: A study of Australian Journalism Redundancies” project (2014–17), the pur...
Background: There is a broad recognition that journalism is facing difficult times in Canada and int...
Rapid change in the news industry and the prevalence of layoffs, buyouts, and closings have led many...
There is an industrial revolution taking place in the media sphere, and it is a result of digitalisa...
In Australia and beyond, journalism is reportedly an industry in crisis, a crisis exacerbated by CO...
Severe contractions in the Australian media landscape have led to a loss of jobs in major metropolit...
While considerable academic attention has been paid to the effect of industry turbulence on journali...
This study examines former newspaper photographers\u27 experience with being laid-off from their sta...
For the past two decades, understandings of the scale of digital disruption in journalism work in po...
Print newspapers are in an age of disruption that has radically affected readership, news consumptio...
As media companies grow in profits and economic significance, workers in these industries are experi...
Due to rising unemployment levels, researchers have begun to investigate how corporations handle lay...
articles, “Downsizing of America, ” arguing that more intense competition and computer-based technol...
Research on journalists and journalistic work has focused on journalists with permanent, full-time e...
This study uses the question, ‘what makes a freelancer specifically a journalist’ as a starting poin...