textNewspaper journalists today find themselves at the nexus of a changing media landscape. Their professional principles and job roles are being challenged by changes in the technology they are expected to use, changes in the economic model that has supported the industry since this nation was founded, and changes in public attitudes and perceptions of newspaper journalism. This study examines these changes through the lens of social identity theory, examining how technological and economic changes have affected newspaper journalists’ perceptions about the ways in which they are able to perform their jobs and their perceptions about threats to the status of their profession, and how those beliefs affect their identification with their news...
As the news industry undergoes rapid change, newsrooms are confronted with continuously evolving cha...
The purpose of this study is to discover how and why journalists within nonprofit or startup newsroo...
Numerous studies have pointed to the fact that journalism in most industrialised societies is underg...
textNewspaper journalists today find themselves at the nexus of a changing media landscape. Their pr...
The internet, and particularly social media, have brought far-reaching change to journalism by calli...
Industry insiders and media academics often voice unease about the transformations taking place in t...
Print newspapers are in an age of disruption that has radically affected readership, news consumptio...
Modeled on the “New Beats: A study of Australian Journalism Redundancies” project (2014–17), the pur...
Is journalism going through ‘de-professionalization’ or is it just entering a new phase – taking a d...
This article explores how the changing nature of journalistic work and organization are affecting th...
Professional ideology and newsroom culture have become deeply embedded and codified in Anglo-America...
Recent national survey data paint a bleak picture of economic struggles and declining audience for t...
The newspaper industry has clearly been affected thoroughly by digitalization, and as a result has a...
Much of the research examining how newspaper journalists respond to changing labor practices finds t...
International audienceNews reporting is both a business and a professional environment within which ...
As the news industry undergoes rapid change, newsrooms are confronted with continuously evolving cha...
The purpose of this study is to discover how and why journalists within nonprofit or startup newsroo...
Numerous studies have pointed to the fact that journalism in most industrialised societies is underg...
textNewspaper journalists today find themselves at the nexus of a changing media landscape. Their pr...
The internet, and particularly social media, have brought far-reaching change to journalism by calli...
Industry insiders and media academics often voice unease about the transformations taking place in t...
Print newspapers are in an age of disruption that has radically affected readership, news consumptio...
Modeled on the “New Beats: A study of Australian Journalism Redundancies” project (2014–17), the pur...
Is journalism going through ‘de-professionalization’ or is it just entering a new phase – taking a d...
This article explores how the changing nature of journalistic work and organization are affecting th...
Professional ideology and newsroom culture have become deeply embedded and codified in Anglo-America...
Recent national survey data paint a bleak picture of economic struggles and declining audience for t...
The newspaper industry has clearly been affected thoroughly by digitalization, and as a result has a...
Much of the research examining how newspaper journalists respond to changing labor practices finds t...
International audienceNews reporting is both a business and a professional environment within which ...
As the news industry undergoes rapid change, newsrooms are confronted with continuously evolving cha...
The purpose of this study is to discover how and why journalists within nonprofit or startup newsroo...
Numerous studies have pointed to the fact that journalism in most industrialised societies is underg...