The Web has changed newswork dramatically. After the turn of the Millennium, the Web 2.0 was welcomed as a unique medium of participation, interaction, and democratization. Due to the increased interactivity of many websites, and the growing prominence of social networking sites such as Facebook that invited the creation and publication of user contributions, many journalism scholars promulgated the potentials of the Web to trigger participation, a new interactivity and, eventually, more transparency, accountability, and responsiveness. In this article, I show how I was equally full of hope that the participatory potential of the Web would become widespread among news organizations. However, recent findings show that most established newsro...
Four factors can be identified which change the media: economics, technology, law/regulation and cul...
MARGARET SIMONS looks at the results of an experiment in online reporting launched by Jay Rosen WAN...
The mainstream online news media face accusations of being slow to respond to so-called 'grassroots'...
Enabled by the increasing popularity of web-based easy-publishing technologies, the vibrant rise of ...
In a time of decling public trust in news, loss of advertising revenue, and an increasingly partipat...
This article critically interrogates key assumptions in popular web discourse by revisiting an early...
The pervasive use of the World Wide Web by the general population has created a\ud cultural shift th...
This article reconstructs the evolution of societal and journalistic meta-discourse about the partic...
We all love public participation in media don’t we? From Dan Gillmor’s ‘We The Media’ to Clay Shirky...
Civic participation in news production has been a trend under academic scrutiny for at least two dec...
Practices commonly termed participatory or citizen journalism, such as blogging and publishing conte...
This article is a contribution to the debate on audience participation in online media with a twofol...
User participation in the journalistic context has theoretically been possible since the emergence o...
In a time of decling public trust in news, loss of advertising revenue, and an increasingly partipat...
As new platforms are developed for communicating, the everyday lives of many are changedat the groun...
Four factors can be identified which change the media: economics, technology, law/regulation and cul...
MARGARET SIMONS looks at the results of an experiment in online reporting launched by Jay Rosen WAN...
The mainstream online news media face accusations of being slow to respond to so-called 'grassroots'...
Enabled by the increasing popularity of web-based easy-publishing technologies, the vibrant rise of ...
In a time of decling public trust in news, loss of advertising revenue, and an increasingly partipat...
This article critically interrogates key assumptions in popular web discourse by revisiting an early...
The pervasive use of the World Wide Web by the general population has created a\ud cultural shift th...
This article reconstructs the evolution of societal and journalistic meta-discourse about the partic...
We all love public participation in media don’t we? From Dan Gillmor’s ‘We The Media’ to Clay Shirky...
Civic participation in news production has been a trend under academic scrutiny for at least two dec...
Practices commonly termed participatory or citizen journalism, such as blogging and publishing conte...
This article is a contribution to the debate on audience participation in online media with a twofol...
User participation in the journalistic context has theoretically been possible since the emergence o...
In a time of decling public trust in news, loss of advertising revenue, and an increasingly partipat...
As new platforms are developed for communicating, the everyday lives of many are changedat the groun...
Four factors can be identified which change the media: economics, technology, law/regulation and cul...
MARGARET SIMONS looks at the results of an experiment in online reporting launched by Jay Rosen WAN...
The mainstream online news media face accusations of being slow to respond to so-called 'grassroots'...