The last decade has seen a transformation of journalism industries and the working lives of our journalists. Do the changes have the same impact everywhere? Do journalists today experience these changes as a pressure or as a possibility? Is something irrevocably lost from journalism with these changes?
Newsworkerstakes a broad range of European countries - North and South, East and West, big and small - comparing in each how journalism as work has been affected by the changes in journalism institutions. The book looks at three pertinent and topical questions: the role of technology in changing journalism work practice; the decline or not of professional values; and whether journalism is becoming more homogenous across national borders.
Drawing on extensive and original research, the book provides a comprehensive picture of contemporary European journalism.
Henrik ?rnebringis Professor of Media and Communication in the Department of Geography, Media and Communication at Karlstad University, Sweden, and a former Senior Research Fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford, UK.
Chapter 1: Journalism as Work and Institution
Chapter 2: Institution, work, and professionalism an analytical framework
Chapter 3: Six countries background and empirical data
Chapter 4: Technology
Chapter 5: Skill
Chapter 6: Autonomy
Chapter 7: Professionalism
Chapter 8: Newswork in Europe: Continuity and Change
Methodological Appendix
Bibliography
Index
The last decade has seen a transformation of the journalism industry. This book compares a range of European countries, looking at how journalistic work has been affected by the changes to journalism institutions. Drawing on extensive new research, it provides unique insights into current journalistic practice.