As governments throughout the world transition to storing and releasing vast amounts of numerical information digitally, journalists are increasingly using digital data reporting as an investigative tool to report on issues in the public interest and to hold government - elected officials and bureaucracy – to account. Through a series of qualitative interviews with data journalists in 17 countries, this article examines the impact that digital data reporting is having on the traditional role of journalism as a fourth estate. Findings suggest the emergence of digital data reporting as a key tool in accountability journalism and in informing and engaging the public. However, the failure of popular ‘tabloid’ journalism to engage with data jour...
Many grand narratives on the transformation of society relate recent changes to broader processes of...
A telephone rings in a crowded newsroom, and journalists hit the ground running, chasing down the st...
Data journalism in the UK grew out of computer-assisted reporting (CAR) in the USA. But how did it c...
As governments throughout the world transition to storing and releasing vast amounts of numerical in...
Data journalism has evolved partly out of computer-assisted reporting (CAR) in the USA – bolstered b...
The centrality of data in modern society has prompted a need to examine the increasingly powerful ro...
Large data stacks that emerged with digitalisation, which could not be processed in a reasonable tim...
Journalists have been using data in their stories for as long as the profession has existed. A revol...
Digital and computational technology is steadily developing and continually bringing changes in the ...
Despite claims of continuity, contemporary data journalism is quite different from the earlier tradi...
The use of data is often viewed as a potentially powerful democratic force in journalism, promoting ...
By Alison Powell, Assistant Professor and Programme Director of the MSc in Media and Comms (Data and...
This article explores the entanglements between data journalists and civic technologists. Following ...
The datafication of society is characterized by data abundance, the increasingly dominant position o...
The datafication of society is characterized by data abundance, the increasingly dominant position o...
Many grand narratives on the transformation of society relate recent changes to broader processes of...
A telephone rings in a crowded newsroom, and journalists hit the ground running, chasing down the st...
Data journalism in the UK grew out of computer-assisted reporting (CAR) in the USA. But how did it c...
As governments throughout the world transition to storing and releasing vast amounts of numerical in...
Data journalism has evolved partly out of computer-assisted reporting (CAR) in the USA – bolstered b...
The centrality of data in modern society has prompted a need to examine the increasingly powerful ro...
Large data stacks that emerged with digitalisation, which could not be processed in a reasonable tim...
Journalists have been using data in their stories for as long as the profession has existed. A revol...
Digital and computational technology is steadily developing and continually bringing changes in the ...
Despite claims of continuity, contemporary data journalism is quite different from the earlier tradi...
The use of data is often viewed as a potentially powerful democratic force in journalism, promoting ...
By Alison Powell, Assistant Professor and Programme Director of the MSc in Media and Comms (Data and...
This article explores the entanglements between data journalists and civic technologists. Following ...
The datafication of society is characterized by data abundance, the increasingly dominant position o...
The datafication of society is characterized by data abundance, the increasingly dominant position o...
Many grand narratives on the transformation of society relate recent changes to broader processes of...
A telephone rings in a crowded newsroom, and journalists hit the ground running, chasing down the st...
Data journalism in the UK grew out of computer-assisted reporting (CAR) in the USA. But how did it c...