This study examines ‘participatory journalism’ from the perspective of participants. Through a series of in-depth interviews with 32 participants from two different participatory journalistic environments set up by professional news organizations, we investigated how participants view and evaluate their participation in journalism. We propose that participants views progress through a series of four stages: anticipation, participation, evaluation and reconsideration. A clear breach is observed between the stage of anticipation and evaluation. We propose that this breach could be couched in terms of both a need and a wish for reciprocity, but also a lack of it. The term ‘reciprocity’ is inspired by Lewis et al.’s notion of ‘reciprocal journa...
Journalism's relationship with the public has historically rested on an assumption of its Fourth Est...
Constructive journalism aims to cover stories about progress and collaboration as well as stories ab...
This article is a contribution to the debate on audience participation in online media with a twofol...
This study examines ‘participatory journalism’ from the perspective of participants. Through a serie...
This study examines ‘participatory journalism’ from the perspective of participants. Through case st...
This article presents a content analysis of five very different examples of participatoryjournalism....
This article presents a content analysis of five very different examples of participatory journalism...
This article presents a systematic literature review of 378 studies (1997–2017) on online participat...
In this article, we investigate the emergence of ʺparticipatory journalismʺ as a scholarly object in...
This study reviews the scholarly literature on participatory journalism and mediatized audience enga...
The concept of reciprocity, particularly in the pro-social sense of mutually beneficial exchange, pr...
As journalists and audiences increasingly interact via social media spaces online, scholars have beg...
Studies of participatory journalism demonstrate that professional journalism can be resistant to cha...
Studies of participatory journalism demonstrate that professional journalism can be resistant to cha...
In a time of decling public trust in news, loss of advertising revenue, and an increasingly partipat...
Journalism's relationship with the public has historically rested on an assumption of its Fourth Est...
Constructive journalism aims to cover stories about progress and collaboration as well as stories ab...
This article is a contribution to the debate on audience participation in online media with a twofol...
This study examines ‘participatory journalism’ from the perspective of participants. Through a serie...
This study examines ‘participatory journalism’ from the perspective of participants. Through case st...
This article presents a content analysis of five very different examples of participatoryjournalism....
This article presents a content analysis of five very different examples of participatory journalism...
This article presents a systematic literature review of 378 studies (1997–2017) on online participat...
In this article, we investigate the emergence of ʺparticipatory journalismʺ as a scholarly object in...
This study reviews the scholarly literature on participatory journalism and mediatized audience enga...
The concept of reciprocity, particularly in the pro-social sense of mutually beneficial exchange, pr...
As journalists and audiences increasingly interact via social media spaces online, scholars have beg...
Studies of participatory journalism demonstrate that professional journalism can be resistant to cha...
Studies of participatory journalism demonstrate that professional journalism can be resistant to cha...
In a time of decling public trust in news, loss of advertising revenue, and an increasingly partipat...
Journalism's relationship with the public has historically rested on an assumption of its Fourth Est...
Constructive journalism aims to cover stories about progress and collaboration as well as stories ab...
This article is a contribution to the debate on audience participation in online media with a twofol...