This article analyses the social processes that stimulate the exchange of new ideas in newsrooms. New ideas are vital for legacy media news organisations to innovate and fundamentally reinvent themselves, which is crucial for their survival. Ample research in other disciplines has shown that perceptions of “trust” and “fear” are strong drivers for sharing (or not sharing) creative ideas at work. However, what fosters the sharing and developing of new ideas has been strikingly under-researched in journalism studies. To fill this research gap we ask: how do perceptions of trust and fear in the newsroom stimulate (or not) the sharing and developing of new ideas? Data have been gathered in the newsrooms of two Dutch newspapers, using qualitativ...
This article contributes with a unique quantitative study of newspaper executives’ perceptions on th...
The study explores uses of algorithmic techniques in journalists\u27 working environments and invest...
The field of journalism in New Zealand has gone through significant changes in the last few years, w...
This article analyses the social processes that stimulate the exchange of new ideas in newsrooms. Ne...
This article analyses the social processes that stimulate the exchange of new ideas in newsrooms. Ne...
Thorough understanding of how "outside the box" ideas in the newsroom can be triggered and fostered ...
Thorough understanding of how “outside the box” ideas in the newsroom can be triggered and fostered ...
Thorough understanding of how "outside the box" ideas in the newsroom can be triggered and fostered ...
This study synthesises two analytical frameworks—journalistic strangers and agents of media innovati...
As the news media continue to search for sustainable business models in response to digitisation, co...
This qualitative study examines creativity and innovation in dispersed, journalistic teams. Specific...
The phenomenon of news automation is viewed ambivalently by news professionals, who understand that ...
In theories about journalism's democratic remit, trust is generally regarded as a prerequisite for p...
This article is concerned with the management of creative journalistic work in a media organisation....
This article contributes with a unique quantitative study of newspaper executives’ perceptions on th...
The study explores uses of algorithmic techniques in journalists\u27 working environments and invest...
The field of journalism in New Zealand has gone through significant changes in the last few years, w...
This article analyses the social processes that stimulate the exchange of new ideas in newsrooms. Ne...
This article analyses the social processes that stimulate the exchange of new ideas in newsrooms. Ne...
Thorough understanding of how "outside the box" ideas in the newsroom can be triggered and fostered ...
Thorough understanding of how “outside the box” ideas in the newsroom can be triggered and fostered ...
Thorough understanding of how "outside the box" ideas in the newsroom can be triggered and fostered ...
This study synthesises two analytical frameworks—journalistic strangers and agents of media innovati...
As the news media continue to search for sustainable business models in response to digitisation, co...
This qualitative study examines creativity and innovation in dispersed, journalistic teams. Specific...
The phenomenon of news automation is viewed ambivalently by news professionals, who understand that ...
In theories about journalism's democratic remit, trust is generally regarded as a prerequisite for p...
This article is concerned with the management of creative journalistic work in a media organisation....
This article contributes with a unique quantitative study of newspaper executives’ perceptions on th...
The study explores uses of algorithmic techniques in journalists\u27 working environments and invest...
The field of journalism in New Zealand has gone through significant changes in the last few years, w...