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Wikipedia

Journalism

Journalism is the production and distribution of reports on the interaction of events, facts, ideas, and people that are the "news of the day" and that informs society to at least some degree of accuracy. The word, a noun, applies to the occupation (professional or not), the methods of gathering information, and the organizing literary styles.

The appropriate role for journalism varies from countries to country, as do perceptions of the profession, and the resulting status. In some nations, the news media are controlled by government and are not independent.[1] In others, news media are independent of the government and operate as private industry. In addition, countries may have differing implementations of laws handling the freedom of speech, freedom of the press as well as slander and libel cases.

The proliferation of the Internet and smartphones has brought significant changes to the media landscape since the turn of the 21st century. This has created a shift in the consumption of print media channels, as people increasingly consume news through e-readers, smartphones, and other personal electronic devices, as opposed to the more traditional formats of newspapers, magazines, or television news channels. News organizations are challenged to fully monetize their digital wing, as well as improvise on the context in which they publish in print. Newspapers have seen print revenues sink at a faster pace than the rate of growth for digital revenues.[2]

Production

Journalistic conventions vary by country. In the United States, journalism is produced by media organizations or by individuals. Bloggers are often regarded as journalists. The Federal Trade Commission requires that bloggers who write about products received as promotional gifts, disclose that they received the products for free. This is intended to eliminate conflicts of interest and protect consumers.[3]

In the US, many credible news organizations are incorporated entities, have an editorial board, and exhibit separate editorial and advertising departments. Many credible news organizations, or their employees, often belong to and abide by the ethics of professional organizations such as the American Society of News Editors, the Society of Professional Journalists, Investigative Reporters & Editors, Inc., or the Online News Association. Many news organizations also have their own codes of ethics that guide journalists' professional publications. For instance, The New York Times code of standards and ethics[4] is considered particularly rigorous.[by whom?]

When crafting news stories, regardless of the medium, fairness and bias are issues of concern to journalists. Some stories are intended to represent the author's own opinion; others are more neutral or feature balanced point - of - view. In a traditional print newspaper and its online version, information is organized into sections. This makes clear the distinction between content based on fact and on opinion. In other media, many of these distinctions break down. Readers should pay careful attention to headings and other design elements to ensure that they understand the journalist's intent. Opinion pieces are generally written by regular columnists or appear in a section titled "Op-ed", these reflect a journalist's own opinions and ideology.[5] While feature stories, breaking news, and hard news stories typically make efforts to remove opinion from the copy.

According to Robert McChesney, healthy journalism in a democratic country must provide an opinion of people in power and who wish to be in power, must include a range of opinions and must regard the informational needs of all people.[6]

Many debates centre on whether journalists are "supposed" to be "objective" and "neutral"; arguments include the fact that journalists produce news out of and as part of a particular social context, and that they are guided by professional codes of ethics and do their best to represent all legitimate points of view. Additionally, the ability to render a subject's complex and fluid narrative with sufficient accuracy is sometimes challenged by the time available to spend with subjects, the affordances or constraints of the medium used to tell the story, and the evolving nature of people's identities.[7]

Forms

There are several forms of journalism with diverse audiences. Journalism is said to serve the role of a "fourth estate", acting as a watchdog on the workings of the government. A single publication (such as a newspaper) contains many forms of journalism, each of which may be presented in different formats. Each section of a newspaper, magazine, or website may cater to a different audience.[8][9]

 
Photojournalists photographing US President Barack Obama in November 2013
 
Photo and broadcast journalists interviewing a government official after a building collapse in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. March 2013.

Some forms include:

  • Access journalism – journalists who self-censor and voluntarily cease speaking about issues that might embarrass their hosts, guests, or powerful politicians or businesspersons.
  • Advocacy journalism – writing to advocate particular viewpoints or influence the opinions of the audience.
  • Broadcast journalism – written or spoken journalism for radio or television
     
    Journalists in the Radio-Canada/CBC newsroom in Montreal, Canada
 
Media greeting Cap Anamur II's Rupert Neudeck in Hamburg, 1986 at a press conference

Social media

The rise of social media has drastically changed the nature of journalistic reporting, giving rise to so-called citizen journalists. In a 2014 study of journalists in the United States, 40% of participants claimed they rely on social media as a source, with over 20% depending on microblogs to collect facts.[12] From this, the conclusion can be drawn that breaking news nowadays often stems from user-generated content, including videos and pictures posted online in social media.[12] However, though 69.2% of the surveyed journalists agreed that social media allowed them to connect to their audience, only 30% thought it had a positive influence on news credibility.[12] In addition to this, a recent study done by Pew Research Center shows that eight-in-ten Americans are getting their news from digital devices.[13]

Consequently, this has resulted in arguments to reconsider journalism as a process distributed among many authors, including the socially mediating public, rather than as individual products and articles written by dedicated journalists.[14]

Because of these changes, the credibility ratings of news outlets has reached an all-time low. A 2014 study revealed that only 22% of Americans reported a "great deal" or "quite a lot of confidence" in either television news or newspapers.[15]

Fake news

"Fake news" is also deliberately untruthful information, which can often spread quickly on social media or by means of fake news websites. News cannot be regarded as "fake", but disinformation rather.

It is often published to intentionally mislead readers to ultimately benefit a cause, organization or an individual. A glaring example was the proliferation of fake news in social media during the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Conspiracy theories, hoaxes, and lies have been circulated under the guise of news reports to benefit specific candidates. One example is a fabricated report of Hillary Clinton's email which was published by a non-existent newspaper called The Denver Guardian.[16] Many critics blamed Facebook for the spread of such material. Its news feed algorithm, in particular, was identified by Vox as the platform where the social media giant exercise billions of editorial decisions every day. Social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and TikTok are distributors of disinformation or "fake news".[17] Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook, has acknowledged the company's role in this problem: in a testimony before a combined Senate Judiciary and Commerce committee hearing on 20 April 2018, he said:

It's clear now that we didn't do enough to prevent these tools from being used for harm as well. That goes for fake news, foreign interference in elections, and hate speech, as well as developers and data privacy.[18]

Readers can often evaluate credibility of news by examining the credibility of the underlying news organization.

The phrase was popularized and used by Donald Trump during his presidential campaign to discredit what he perceived as negative news coverage of his candidacy and then the presidency.[19]

In some countries, including Turkey,[20] Egypt,[21] India,[22] Bangladesh,[23] Iran,[24] Nigeria,[25] Ethiopia,[26] Kenya,[27] Cote d’Ivoire,[28] Montenegro,[29] Kazakhstan,[30] Azerbaijan,[31] Malaysia,[32] Singapore,[33] Philippines,[34] and Somalia[35] journalists have been threatened or arrested for allegedly spreading fake news about the COVID-19 pandemic.

History

Antiquity

While publications reporting the news to the general public in a standardized fashion only began to appear in the 17th century and later, governments as early as Han dynasty China made use of regularly published news bulletins.[36] Similar publications were established in the Republic of Venice in the 16th century.[37] These bulletins, however, were intended only for government officials, and thus were not journalistic news publications in the modern sense of the term.

Early modern newspapers

As mass-printing technologies like the printing press spread, newspapers were established to provide increasingly literate audiences with the news. The first references to privately owned newspaper publishers in China date to the late Ming dynasty in 1582.[38] Johann Carolus's Relation aller Fürnemmen und gedenckwürdigen Historien, published in 1605 in Strasbourg, is often recognized as the first newspaper in Europe.

Freedom of the press was formally established in Great Britain in 1695, with Alan Rusbridger, former editor of The Guardian, stating: "licensing of the press in Britain was abolished in 1695. Remember how the freedoms won here became a model for much of the rest of the world, and be conscious how the world still watches us to see how we protect those freedoms."[39] The first successful English daily, the Daily Courant, was published from 1702 to 1735.[40] While journalistic enterprises were started as private ventures in some regions, such as the Holy Roman Empire and the British Empire, other countries such as France and Prussia kept tighter control of the press, treating it primarily as an outlet for government propaganda and subjecting it to uniform censorship. Other governments, such as the Russian Empire, were even more distrusting of the journalistic press and effectively banned journalistic publications until the mid-19th century.[41] As newspaper publication became a more and more established practice, publishers would increase publication to a weekly or daily rate. Newspapers were more heavily concentrated in cities that were centres of trade, such as Amsterdam, London, and Berlin. The first newspapers in Latin America would be established in the mid-to-late 19th century.

News media and the revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries

Newspapers played a significant role in mobilizing popular support in favor of the liberal revolutions of the late 18th and 19th centuries. In the American Colonies, newspapers motivated people to revolt against British rule by publishing grievances against the British crown and republishing pamphlets by revolutionaries such as Thomas Paine,[42][43] while loyalist publications motivated support against the American Revolution.[44] News publications in the United States would remain proudly and publicly partisan throughout the 19th century.[45] In France, political newspapers sprang up during the French Revolution, with L'Ami du peuple, edited by Jean-Paul Marat, playing a particularly famous role in arguing for the rights of the revolutionary lower classes. Napoleon would reintroduce strict censorship laws in 1800, but after his reign print publications would flourish and play an important role in political culture.[46] As part of the Revolutions of 1848, radical liberal publications such as the Rheinische Zeitung, Pesti Hírlap, and Morgenbladet would motivate people toward deposing the aristocratic governments of Central Europe.[47] Other liberal publications played a more moderate role: The Russian Bulletin praised Alexander II of Russia's liberal reforms in the late 19th century, and supported increased political and economic freedoms for peasants as well as the establishment of a parliamentary system in Russia.[48] Farther to the left, socialist and communist newspapers had wide followings in France, Russia and Germany despite being outlawed by the government.[49][50][51]

Early 20th century

China

Journalism in China before 1910 primarily served the international community. The overthrow of the old imperial regime in 1911 produced a surge in Chinese nationalism, an end to censorship, and a demand for professional, nation-wide journalism.[52] All the major cities launched such efforts. By the late 1920s, however, there was a much greater emphasis on advertising and expanding circulation, and much less interest in the sort of advocacy journalism that had inspired the revolutionaries.[53]

France

The Parisian newspapers were largely stagnant after the First World War; circulation inched up to six million a day from five million in 1910. The major postwar success story was Paris Soir; which lacked any political agenda and was dedicated to providing a mix of sensational reporting to aid circulation, and serious articles to build prestige. By 1939 its circulation was over 1.7 million, double that of its nearest rival the tabloid Le Petit Parisien. In addition to its daily paper Paris Soir sponsored a highly successful women's magazine Marie-Claire. Another magazine Match was modeled after the photojournalism of the American magazine Life. [54]

Great Britain

By 1900 popular journalism in Britain aimed at the largest possible audience, including the working class, had proven a success and made its profits through advertising. Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe (1865–1922), "More than anyone... shaped the modern press. Developments he introduced or harnessed remain central: broad contents, exploitation of advertising revenue to subsidize prices, aggressive marketing, subordinate regional markets, independence from party control.[55] His Daily Mail held the world record for daily circulation until his death. Prime Minister Lord Salisbury quipped it was "written by office boys for office boys".[56]

Described as "the scoop of the century", as a rookie journalist for The Daily Telegraph in 1939 Clare Hollingworth was the first to report the outbreak of World War II.[57] While travelling from Poland to Germany, she spotted and reported German forces massed on the Polish border; The Daily Telegraph headline read: "1,000 tanks massed on Polish border "; three days later she was the first to report the German invasion of Poland.[58]

During World War II, George Orwell worked as a journalist at The Observer for seven years, and its editor David Astor gave a copy of Orwell's essay "Politics and the English Language"—a critique of vague, slovenly language—to every new recruit.[59] In 2003, literary editor at the newspaper Robert McCrum wrote, "Even now, it is quoted in our style book".[59]

India

The first newspaper of India, Hicky's Bengal Gazette, was published on 29 January 1780. This first effort at journalism enjoyed only a short stint yet it was a momentous development, as it gave birth to modern journalism in India. Following Hicky's efforts which had to be shut down just within two years of circulation, several English newspapers started publication in the aftermath. Most of them enjoyed a circulation figure of about 400 and were weeklies giving personal news items and classified advertisements about a variety of products. Later on, in the 1800s, English newspapers were started by Indian publishers with English-speaking Indians as the target audience. During that era vast differences in language was a major problem in facilitating smooth communication among the people of the country. This is because they hardly knew the languages prevalent in other parts of this vast land. However, English became a lingua franca across the country. Notable among this breed is the one named 'Bengal Gazette' started by Gangadhar Bhattacharyya in 1816.[citation needed]

United States

The late 19th and early 20th century in the United States saw the advent of media empires controlled by the likes of William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer. Realizing that they could expand their audience by abandoning politically polarized content, thus making more money off of advertising, American newspapers began to abandon their partisan politics in favor of less political reporting starting around 1900.[60] Newspapers of this era embraced sensationalized reporting and larger headline typefaces and layouts, a style that would become dubbed "yellow journalism". Newspaper publishing became much more heavily professionalized in this era, and issues of writing quality and workroom discipline saw vast improvement.[61] This era saw the establishment of freedom of the press as a legal norm, as President Theodore Roosevelt tried and failed to sue newspapers for reporting corruption in his handling of the purchase of the Panama Canal.[62] Still, critics note that although government's ability to suppress journalistic speech is heavily limited, the concentration of newspaper (and general media) ownership in the hands of a small number of private business owners leads to other biases in reporting and media self-censorship that benefits the interests of corporations and the government.[63][64][65]

African-American press

The rampant discrimination and segregation against African-Americans led to the founding their own daily and weekly newspapers, especially in large cities. While the first Black newspapers in America were established in the early 19th century,[66] in the 20th century these newspapers truly flourished in major cities, with publishers playing a major role in politics and business affairs. Representative leaders included Robert Sengstacke Abbott (1870–1940), publisher of the Chicago Defender; John Mitchell, Jr. (1863–1929), editor of the Richmond Planet and president of the National Afro-American Press Association; Anthony Overton (1865–1946), publisher of the Chicago Bee, and Robert Lee Vann (1879–1940), the publisher and editor of the Pittsburgh Courier.[67]

College

Although it is not completely necessary to have attended college to be a journalist, over the past few years it has become more common to attend. With this becoming more popular, jobs are starting to require a degree to be hired. The first school of Journalism opened as part of the University of Missouri in 1908. In the History Of Journalism page, it goes into depth on how journalism has evolved into what it is today. As of right now, there are a couple different routes one can take if interested in journalism. If one wanting to expand their skills as a journalist, there are many college courses and workshops one can take. If going the full college route, the average time is takes to graduate with a journalism degree is 4 years.[68]

The top 5 ranked journalism schools in the US for the school year of 2022 are: 1. Washington and Lee University. 2. Northwestern University. 3. Georgetown University. 4. Columbia University in the City of New York. 5. University of Wisconsin - Madison.[69]

Writing for experts or for ordinary citizens

 

In the 1920s in the United States, as newspapers dropped their blatant partisanship in search of new subscribers, political analyst Walter Lippmann and philosopher John Dewey debated the role of journalism in a democracy.[70] Their differing philosophies still characterize an ongoing debate about the role of journalism in society. Lippmann's views prevailed for decades, helping to bolster the Progressives' confidence in decision-making by experts, with the general public standing by. Lippmann argued that high-powered journalism was wasted on ordinary citizens, but was of genuine value to an elite class of administrators and experts.[71] Dewey, on the other hand, believed not only that the public was capable of understanding the issues created or responded to by the elite, but also that it was in the public forum that decisions should be made after discussion and debate. When issues were thoroughly vetted, then the best ideas would bubble to the surface. The danger of demagoguery and false news did not trouble Dewey. His faith in popular democracy has been implemented in various degrees, and is now known as "community journalism".[72] The 1920s debate has been endlessly repeated across the globe, as journalists wrestle with their roles.[73]

Radio

Radio broadcasting increased in popularity starting in the 1920s, becoming widespread in the 1930s. While most radio programming was oriented toward music, sports, and entertainment, radio also broadcast speeches and occasional news programming. Radio reached the peak of its importance during World War II, as radio and newsreels were major sources of up-to-date information on the ongoing war. In the Soviet Union, radio would be heavily utilized by the state to broadcast political speeches by leadership. These broadcasts would very rarely have any additional editorial content or analysis, setting them apart from modern news reporting.[74] The radio would however soon be eclipsed by broadcast television starting in the 1950s.

Television

Starting in the 1940s, United States broadcast television channels would air 10-to-15-minute segments of news programming one or two times per evening. The era of live-TV news coverage would begin in the 1960s with the assassination of John F. Kennedy, broadcast and reported to live on a variety of nationally syndicated television channels. During the 60s and 70s, television channels would begin adding regular morning or midday news shows. Starting in 1980 with the establishment of CNN, news channels began providing 24-hour news coverage, a format which persists through today.

Digital age

 
Journalists at a press conference

The role and status of journalism, as well as mass media, has undergone changes over the last two decades, together with the advancement of digital technology and publication of news on the Internet. This has created a shift in the consumption of print media channels, as people increasingly consume news through e-readers, smartphones, and other electronic devices. News organizations are challenged to fully monetize their digital wing, as well as improvise on the context in which they publish in print. Newspapers have seen print revenues sink at a faster pace than the rate of growth for digital revenues.[2]

Notably, in the American media landscape, newsrooms have reduced their staff and coverage as traditional media channels, such as television, grappling with declining audiences. For example, between 2007 and 2012, CNN edited its story packages into nearly half of their original time length.[75]

The compactness in coverage has been linked to broad audience attrition.[75] According to the Pew Research Center, the circulation for U.S. newspapers has fallen sharply in the 21st century.[76] The digital era also introduced journalism whose development is done by ordinary citizens, with the rise of citizen journalism being possible through the Internet. Using video camera-equipped smartphones, active citizens are now enabled to record footage of news events and upload them onto channels like YouTube (which is often discovered and used by mainstream news media outlets). News from a variety of online sources, like blogs and other social media, results in a wider choice of official and unofficial sources, rather than only traditional media organizations.

 
Journalist interviewing a cosplayer

Demographics in 2016

A worldwide sample of 27,500 journalists in 67 countries in 2012-2016 produced the following profile:[77]

  • 57 percent male;
  • Mean age of 38
  • Mean years of experience:13
  • College degree: 56 percent; graduate degree: 29 percent
  • 61 percent specialized in journalism/communications at college
  • 62 percent identified as generalists and 23 percent as hard-news beat journalists
  • 47 percent were members of a professional association
  • 80 percent worked full-time
  • 50 percent worked in print, 23 percent in television, 17 percent in radio, and 16 percent online.

Ethics and standards

 
News photographers and reporters waiting behind a police line in New York City, in May 1994

While various existing codes have some differences, most share common elements including the principles of – truthfulness, accuracy, objectivity, impartiality, fairness and public accountability – as these apply to the acquisition of newsworthy information and its subsequent dissemination to the public.[78][79][80][81][82]

Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel propose several guidelines for journalists in their book The Elements of Journalism.[83] Their view is that journalism's first loyalty is to the citizenry and that journalists are thus obliged to tell the truth and must serve as an independent monitor of powerful individuals and institutions within society. In this view, the essence of journalism is to provide citizens with reliable information through the discipline of verification.

Some journalistic Codes of Ethics, notably the European ones,[84] also include a concern with discriminatory references in news based on race, religion, sexual orientation, and physical or mental disabilities.[85][86][87][88] The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe approved in 1993 Resolution 1003 on the Ethics of Journalism which recommends journalists to respect the presumption of innocence, in particular in cases that are still sub judice.[89]

In the UK, all newspapers are bound by the Code of Practice of the Independent Press Standards Organisation. This includes points like respecting people's privacy and ensuring accuracy. However, the Media Standards Trust has criticized the PCC, claiming it needs to be radically changed to secure the public trust of newspapers.

This is in stark contrast to the media climate prior to the 20th century, where the media market was dominated by smaller newspapers and pamphleteers who usually had an overt and often radical agenda, with no presumption of balance or objectivity.

Because of the pressure on journalists to report news promptly and before their competitors, factual errors occur more frequently than in writing produced and edited under less time pressure. Thus a typical issue of a major daily newspaper may contain several corrections of articles published the previous day. Perhaps the most famous journalistic mistake caused by time pressure was the Dewey Defeats Truman edition of the Chicago Daily Tribune, based on early election returns that failed to anticipate the actual result of the 1948 US presidential election.

Codes of ethics

There are over 242 codes of ethics in journalism that vary across various regions of the world.[90] The codes of ethics are created through an interaction of different groups of people such as the public and journalists themselves. Most of the codes of ethics serve as a representation of the economic and political beliefs of the society where the code was written.[90] Despite the fact that there are a variety of codes of ethics, some of the core elements present in all codes are: remaining objective, providing the truth, and being honest.[90]

Journalism does not have a universal code of conduct; individuals are not legally obliged to follow a certain set of rules like a doctor or a lawyer does.[91] There have been discussions for creating a universal code of conduct in journalism. One suggestion centers on having three claims for credibility, justifiable consequence, and the claim of humanity.[92] Within the claim of credibility, journalists are expected to provide the public with reliable and trustworthy information, and allowing the public to question the nature of the information and its acquisition. The second claim of justifiable consequences centers on weighing the benefits and detriments of a potentially harmful story and acting accordingly. An example of justifiable consequence is exposing a professional with dubious practices; on the other hand, acting within justifiable consequence means writing compassionately about a family in mourning. The third claim is the claim of humanity which states that journalists are writing for a global population and therefore must serve everyone globally in their work, avoiding smaller loyalties to country, city, etc.[92]

Legal status

 
Turkish journalists protesting imprisonment of their colleagues on Human Rights Day, 10 December 2016
 
Number of journalists reported killed between 2002 and 2013[93]

Governments have widely varying policies and practices towards journalists, which control what they can research and write, and what press organizations can publish. Some governments guarantee the freedom of the press; while other nations severely restrict what journalists can research or publish.

Journalists in many nations have some privileges that members of the general public do not, including better access to public events, crime scenes and press conferences, and to extended interviews with public officials, celebrities and others in the public eye.

Journalists who elect to cover conflicts, whether wars between nations or insurgencies within nations, often give up any expectation of protection by government, if not giving up their rights to protection from the government. Journalists who are captured or detained during a conflict are expected to be treated as civilians and to be released to their national government. Many governments around the world target journalists for intimidation, harassment, and violence because of the nature of their work.[94]

Right to protect confidentiality of sources

Journalists' interaction with sources sometimes involves confidentiality, an extension of freedom of the press giving journalists a legal protection to keep the identity of a confidential informant private even when demanded by police or prosecutors; withholding their sources can land journalists in contempt of court, or in jail.

In the United States, there is no right to protect sources in a federal court. However, federal courts will refuse to force journalists to reveal their sources, unless the information the court seeks is highly relevant to the case and there's no other way to get it. State courts provide varying degrees of such protection. Journalists who refuse to testify even when ordered to can be found in contempt of court and fined or jailed. On the journalistic side of keeping sources confidential, there is also a risk to the journalist's credibility because there can be no actual confirmation of whether the information is valid. As such it is highly discouraged for journalists to have confidential sources[95]

See also

Reviews

Academic journals

References

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Sources

Further reading

  • de Beer Arnold S. and John C. Merrill, eds. Global Journalism: Topical Issues and Media Systems (5th ed. 2008)
  • Hanitzsch, Thomas et al. eds. Worlds of Journalism: Journalistic Cultures around the Globe (2019) online review
  • Kaltenbrunner, Andy and Matthias Karmasin and Daniela Kraus, eds. "The Journalism Report V: Innovation and Transition", Facultas, 2017
  • Marthoz, J.-P. (2016). Giving up on the graft and the grind: Why journalists are failing to cover difficult stories. Index on Censorship, 45(2), 22–27.
  • Quick, Amanda C. ed. World Press Encyclopedia: A Survey of Press Systems Worldwide (2nd ed. 2 vol 2002); 2500 pp; highly detailed coverage of every country large and small.
  • Rodgers, Ronald R. 2018. The Struggle for the Soul of Journalism : The Pulpit Versus the Press 1833-1923. Columbia Missouri: University of Missouri Press.
  • Rutherfurd, Livingston., John Peter Zenger; His Press, His Trial, and a Bibliography of Zenger Imprints. Gloucester,Mass: Peter Smith, 1963.
  • Shoemaker, Pamela J. and Akiba A. Cohen, eds. News Around the World: Content, Practitioners, and the Public (2nd ed. 2005)
  • Sloan, W. David; Mullikin Parcell, Lisa, eds. (2002). American Journalism: History, Principles, Practices. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-5155-5.
  • Sterling, Christopher H. (ed.), Encyclopedia of journalism, *(6 vol, SAGE, 2009).

External links

journalism, reportage, redirects, here, other, uses, reportage, disambiguation, academic, journal, journal, production, distribution, reports, interaction, events, facts, ideas, people, that, news, that, informs, society, least, some, degree, accuracy, word, n. Reportage redirects here For other uses see Reportage disambiguation For the academic journal see Journalism journal Journalism is the production and distribution of reports on the interaction of events facts ideas and people that are the news of the day and that informs society to at least some degree of accuracy The word a noun applies to the occupation professional or not the methods of gathering information and the organizing literary styles The appropriate role for journalism varies from countries to country as do perceptions of the profession and the resulting status In some nations the news media are controlled by government and are not independent 1 In others news media are independent of the government and operate as private industry In addition countries may have differing implementations of laws handling the freedom of speech freedom of the press as well as slander and libel cases The proliferation of the Internet and smartphones has brought significant changes to the media landscape since the turn of the 21st century This has created a shift in the consumption of print media channels as people increasingly consume news through e readers smartphones and other personal electronic devices as opposed to the more traditional formats of newspapers magazines or television news channels News organizations are challenged to fully monetize their digital wing as well as improvise on the context in which they publish in print Newspapers have seen print revenues sink at a faster pace than the rate of growth for digital revenues 2 Contents 1 Production 2 Forms 2 1 Social media 2 2 Fake news 3 History 3 1 Antiquity 3 2 Early modern newspapers 3 2 1 News media and the revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries 3 3 Early 20th century 3 3 1 China 3 3 2 France 3 3 3 Great Britain 3 3 4 India 3 3 5 United States 3 3 6 African American press 3 3 7 College 3 3 8 Writing for experts or for ordinary citizens 3 4 Television 3 5 Digital age 3 6 Demographics in 2016 4 Ethics and standards 4 1 Codes of ethics 5 Legal status 5 1 Right to protect confidentiality of sources 6 See also 6 1 Reviews 6 2 Academic journals 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksProduction EditJournalistic conventions vary by country In the United States journalism is produced by media organizations or by individuals Bloggers are often regarded as journalists The Federal Trade Commission requires that bloggers who write about products received as promotional gifts disclose that they received the products for free This is intended to eliminate conflicts of interest and protect consumers 3 In the US many credible news organizations are incorporated entities have an editorial board and exhibit separate editorial and advertising departments Many credible news organizations or their employees often belong to and abide by the ethics of professional organizations such as the American Society of News Editors the Society of Professional Journalists Investigative Reporters amp Editors Inc or the Online News Association Many news organizations also have their own codes of ethics that guide journalists professional publications For instance The New York Times code of standards and ethics 4 is considered particularly rigorous by whom When crafting news stories regardless of the medium fairness and bias are issues of concern to journalists Some stories are intended to represent the author s own opinion others are more neutral or feature balanced point of view In a traditional print newspaper and its online version information is organized into sections This makes clear the distinction between content based on fact and on opinion In other media many of these distinctions break down Readers should pay careful attention to headings and other design elements to ensure that they understand the journalist s intent Opinion pieces are generally written by regular columnists or appear in a section titled Op ed these reflect a journalist s own opinions and ideology 5 While feature stories breaking news and hard news stories typically make efforts to remove opinion from the copy According to Robert McChesney healthy journalism in a democratic country must provide an opinion of people in power and who wish to be in power must include a range of opinions and must regard the informational needs of all people 6 Many debates centre on whether journalists are supposed to be objective and neutral arguments include the fact that journalists produce news out of and as part of a particular social context and that they are guided by professional codes of ethics and do their best to represent all legitimate points of view Additionally the ability to render a subject s complex and fluid narrative with sufficient accuracy is sometimes challenged by the time available to spend with subjects the affordances or constraints of the medium used to tell the story and the evolving nature of people s identities 7 Forms EditMain article Journalism genres There are several forms of journalism with diverse audiences Journalism is said to serve the role of a fourth estate acting as a watchdog on the workings of the government A single publication such as a newspaper contains many forms of journalism each of which may be presented in different formats Each section of a newspaper magazine or website may cater to a different audience 8 9 Photojournalists photographing US President Barack Obama in November 2013 Photo and broadcast journalists interviewing a government official after a building collapse in Dar es Salaam Tanzania March 2013 Some forms include Access journalism journalists who self censor and voluntarily cease speaking about issues that might embarrass their hosts guests or powerful politicians or businesspersons Advocacy journalism writing to advocate particular viewpoints or influence the opinions of the audience Broadcast journalism written or spoken journalism for radio or television Journalists in the Radio Canada CBC newsroom in Montreal Canada Media greeting Cap Anamur II s Rupert Neudeck in Hamburg 1986 at a press conference Business journalism tracks records analyzes and interprets the business economic and financial activities and changes that take place in societies Citizen journalism participatory journalism Data journalism the practice of finding stories in numbers and using numbers to tell stories Data journalists may use data to support their reporting They may also report about uses and misuses of data The US news organization ProPublica is known as a pioneer of data journalism Drone journalism use of drones to capture journalistic footage 10 Gonzo journalism first championed by Hunter S Thompson gonzo journalism is a highly personal style of reporting 11 Interactive journalism a type of online journalism that is presented on the web Investigative journalism in depth reporting that uncovers social problems Photojournalism the practice of telling true stories through images Political journalism coverage of all aspects of politics and political science Sensor journalism the use of sensors to support journalistic inquiry Sports journalism writing that reports on matters pertaining to sporting topics and competitions Tabloid journalism writing that is light hearted and entertaining Considered less legitimate than mainstream journalism Yellow journalism or sensationalism writing which emphasizes exaggerated claims or rumors Global journalism journalism that encompasses a global outlook focusing on intercontinental issues War journalism the covering of wars and armed conflictsSocial media Edit The rise of social media has drastically changed the nature of journalistic reporting giving rise to so called citizen journalists In a 2014 study of journalists in the United States 40 of participants claimed they rely on social media as a source with over 20 depending on microblogs to collect facts 12 From this the conclusion can be drawn that breaking news nowadays often stems from user generated content including videos and pictures posted online in social media 12 However though 69 2 of the surveyed journalists agreed that social media allowed them to connect to their audience only 30 thought it had a positive influence on news credibility 12 In addition to this a recent study done by Pew Research Center shows that eight in ten Americans are getting their news from digital devices 13 Consequently this has resulted in arguments to reconsider journalism as a process distributed among many authors including the socially mediating public rather than as individual products and articles written by dedicated journalists 14 Because of these changes the credibility ratings of news outlets has reached an all time low A 2014 study revealed that only 22 of Americans reported a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in either television news or newspapers 15 Fake news Edit Fake news is also deliberately untruthful information which can often spread quickly on social media or by means of fake news websites News cannot be regarded as fake but disinformation rather It is often published to intentionally mislead readers to ultimately benefit a cause organization or an individual A glaring example was the proliferation of fake news in social media during the 2016 U S presidential election Conspiracy theories hoaxes and lies have been circulated under the guise of news reports to benefit specific candidates One example is a fabricated report of Hillary Clinton s email which was published by a non existent newspaper called The Denver Guardian 16 Many critics blamed Facebook for the spread of such material Its news feed algorithm in particular was identified by Vox as the platform where the social media giant exercise billions of editorial decisions every day Social media platforms such as Facebook Twitter and TikTok are distributors of disinformation or fake news 17 Mark Zuckerberg the CEO of Facebook has acknowledged the company s role in this problem in a testimony before a combined Senate Judiciary and Commerce committee hearing on 20 April 2018 he said It s clear now that we didn t do enough to prevent these tools from being used for harm as well That goes for fake news foreign interference in elections and hate speech as well as developers and data privacy 18 Readers can often evaluate credibility of news by examining the credibility of the underlying news organization The phrase was popularized and used by Donald Trump during his presidential campaign to discredit what he perceived as negative news coverage of his candidacy and then the presidency 19 In some countries including Turkey 20 Egypt 21 India 22 Bangladesh 23 Iran 24 Nigeria 25 Ethiopia 26 Kenya 27 Cote d Ivoire 28 Montenegro 29 Kazakhstan 30 Azerbaijan 31 Malaysia 32 Singapore 33 Philippines 34 and Somalia 35 journalists have been threatened or arrested for allegedly spreading fake news about the COVID 19 pandemic History EditMain article History of journalism Antiquity Edit While publications reporting the news to the general public in a standardized fashion only began to appear in the 17th century and later governments as early as Han dynasty China made use of regularly published news bulletins 36 Similar publications were established in the Republic of Venice in the 16th century 37 These bulletins however were intended only for government officials and thus were not journalistic news publications in the modern sense of the term Early modern newspapers Edit As mass printing technologies like the printing press spread newspapers were established to provide increasingly literate audiences with the news The first references to privately owned newspaper publishers in China date to the late Ming dynasty in 1582 38 Johann Carolus s Relation aller Furnemmen und gedenckwurdigen Historien published in 1605 in Strasbourg is often recognized as the first newspaper in Europe Freedom of the press was formally established in Great Britain in 1695 with Alan Rusbridger former editor of The Guardian stating licensing of the press in Britain was abolished in 1695 Remember how the freedoms won here became a model for much of the rest of the world and be conscious how the world still watches us to see how we protect those freedoms 39 The first successful English daily the Daily Courant was published from 1702 to 1735 40 While journalistic enterprises were started as private ventures in some regions such as the Holy Roman Empire and the British Empire other countries such as France and Prussia kept tighter control of the press treating it primarily as an outlet for government propaganda and subjecting it to uniform censorship Other governments such as the Russian Empire were even more distrusting of the journalistic press and effectively banned journalistic publications until the mid 19th century 41 As newspaper publication became a more and more established practice publishers would increase publication to a weekly or daily rate Newspapers were more heavily concentrated in cities that were centres of trade such as Amsterdam London and Berlin The first newspapers in Latin America would be established in the mid to late 19th century News media and the revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries Edit Newspapers played a significant role in mobilizing popular support in favor of the liberal revolutions of the late 18th and 19th centuries In the American Colonies newspapers motivated people to revolt against British rule by publishing grievances against the British crown and republishing pamphlets by revolutionaries such as Thomas Paine 42 43 while loyalist publications motivated support against the American Revolution 44 News publications in the United States would remain proudly and publicly partisan throughout the 19th century 45 In France political newspapers sprang up during the French Revolution with L Ami du peuple edited by Jean Paul Marat playing a particularly famous role in arguing for the rights of the revolutionary lower classes Napoleon would reintroduce strict censorship laws in 1800 but after his reign print publications would flourish and play an important role in political culture 46 As part of the Revolutions of 1848 radical liberal publications such as the Rheinische Zeitung Pesti Hirlap and Morgenbladet would motivate people toward deposing the aristocratic governments of Central Europe 47 Other liberal publications played a more moderate role The Russian Bulletin praised Alexander II of Russia s liberal reforms in the late 19th century and supported increased political and economic freedoms for peasants as well as the establishment of a parliamentary system in Russia 48 Farther to the left socialist and communist newspapers had wide followings in France Russia and Germany despite being outlawed by the government 49 50 51 Early 20th century Edit China Edit Further information History of journalism China Journalism in China before 1910 primarily served the international community The overthrow of the old imperial regime in 1911 produced a surge in Chinese nationalism an end to censorship and a demand for professional nation wide journalism 52 All the major cities launched such efforts By the late 1920s however there was a much greater emphasis on advertising and expanding circulation and much less interest in the sort of advocacy journalism that had inspired the revolutionaries 53 France Edit Main article History of French journalism The Parisian newspapers were largely stagnant after the First World War circulation inched up to six million a day from five million in 1910 The major postwar success story was Paris Soir which lacked any political agenda and was dedicated to providing a mix of sensational reporting to aid circulation and serious articles to build prestige By 1939 its circulation was over 1 7 million double that of its nearest rival the tabloid Le Petit Parisien In addition to its daily paper Paris Soir sponsored a highly successful women s magazine Marie Claire Another magazine Match was modeled after the photojournalism of the American magazine Life 54 Great Britain Edit Main article History of journalism in the United Kingdom By 1900 popular journalism in Britain aimed at the largest possible audience including the working class had proven a success and made its profits through advertising Alfred Harmsworth 1st Viscount Northcliffe 1865 1922 More than anyone shaped the modern press Developments he introduced or harnessed remain central broad contents exploitation of advertising revenue to subsidize prices aggressive marketing subordinate regional markets independence from party control 55 His Daily Mail held the world record for daily circulation until his death Prime Minister Lord Salisbury quipped it was written by office boys for office boys 56 Described as the scoop of the century as a rookie journalist for The Daily Telegraph in 1939 Clare Hollingworth was the first to report the outbreak of World War II 57 While travelling from Poland to Germany she spotted and reported German forces massed on the Polish border The Daily Telegraph headline read 1 000 tanks massed on Polish border three days later she was the first to report the German invasion of Poland 58 During World War II George Orwell worked as a journalist at The Observer for seven years and its editor David Astor gave a copy of Orwell s essay Politics and the English Language a critique of vague slovenly language to every new recruit 59 In 2003 literary editor at the newspaper Robert McCrum wrote Even now it is quoted in our style book 59 India Edit Main article History of Indian journalism The first newspaper of India Hicky s Bengal Gazette was published on 29 January 1780 This first effort at journalism enjoyed only a short stint yet it was a momentous development as it gave birth to modern journalism in India Following Hicky s efforts which had to be shut down just within two years of circulation several English newspapers started publication in the aftermath Most of them enjoyed a circulation figure of about 400 and were weeklies giving personal news items and classified advertisements about a variety of products Later on in the 1800s English newspapers were started by Indian publishers with English speaking Indians as the target audience During that era vast differences in language was a major problem in facilitating smooth communication among the people of the country This is because they hardly knew the languages prevalent in other parts of this vast land However English became a lingua franca across the country Notable among this breed is the one named Bengal Gazette started by Gangadhar Bhattacharyya in 1816 citation needed United States Edit Main article History of American journalism The late 19th and early 20th century in the United States saw the advent of media empires controlled by the likes of William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer Realizing that they could expand their audience by abandoning politically polarized content thus making more money off of advertising American newspapers began to abandon their partisan politics in favor of less political reporting starting around 1900 60 Newspapers of this era embraced sensationalized reporting and larger headline typefaces and layouts a style that would become dubbed yellow journalism Newspaper publishing became much more heavily professionalized in this era and issues of writing quality and workroom discipline saw vast improvement 61 This era saw the establishment of freedom of the press as a legal norm as President Theodore Roosevelt tried and failed to sue newspapers for reporting corruption in his handling of the purchase of the Panama Canal 62 Still critics note that although government s ability to suppress journalistic speech is heavily limited the concentration of newspaper and general media ownership in the hands of a small number of private business owners leads to other biases in reporting and media self censorship that benefits the interests of corporations and the government 63 64 65 African American press Edit The rampant discrimination and segregation against African Americans led to the founding their own daily and weekly newspapers especially in large cities While the first Black newspapers in America were established in the early 19th century 66 in the 20th century these newspapers truly flourished in major cities with publishers playing a major role in politics and business affairs Representative leaders included Robert Sengstacke Abbott 1870 1940 publisher of the Chicago Defender John Mitchell Jr 1863 1929 editor of the Richmond Planet and president of the National Afro American Press Association Anthony Overton 1865 1946 publisher of the Chicago Bee and Robert Lee Vann 1879 1940 the publisher and editor of the Pittsburgh Courier 67 College Edit Although it is not completely necessary to have attended college to be a journalist over the past few years it has become more common to attend With this becoming more popular jobs are starting to require a degree to be hired The first school of Journalism opened as part of the University of Missouri in 1908 In the History Of Journalism page it goes into depth on how journalism has evolved into what it is today As of right now there are a couple different routes one can take if interested in journalism If one wanting to expand their skills as a journalist there are many college courses and workshops one can take If going the full college route the average time is takes to graduate with a journalism degree is 4 years 68 The top 5 ranked journalism schools in the US for the school year of 2022 are 1 Washington and Lee University 2 Northwestern University 3 Georgetown University 4 Columbia University in the City of New York 5 University of Wisconsin Madison 69 Writing for experts or for ordinary citizens Edit Walter Lippmann in 1914 In the 1920s in the United States as newspapers dropped their blatant partisanship in search of new subscribers political analyst Walter Lippmann and philosopher John Dewey debated the role of journalism in a democracy 70 Their differing philosophies still characterize an ongoing debate about the role of journalism in society Lippmann s views prevailed for decades helping to bolster the Progressives confidence in decision making by experts with the general public standing by Lippmann argued that high powered journalism was wasted on ordinary citizens but was of genuine value to an elite class of administrators and experts 71 Dewey on the other hand believed not only that the public was capable of understanding the issues created or responded to by the elite but also that it was in the public forum that decisions should be made after discussion and debate When issues were thoroughly vetted then the best ideas would bubble to the surface The danger of demagoguery and false news did not trouble Dewey His faith in popular democracy has been implemented in various degrees and is now known as community journalism 72 The 1920s debate has been endlessly repeated across the globe as journalists wrestle with their roles 73 RadioRadio broadcasting increased in popularity starting in the 1920s becoming widespread in the 1930s While most radio programming was oriented toward music sports and entertainment radio also broadcast speeches and occasional news programming Radio reached the peak of its importance during World War II as radio and newsreels were major sources of up to date information on the ongoing war In the Soviet Union radio would be heavily utilized by the state to broadcast political speeches by leadership These broadcasts would very rarely have any additional editorial content or analysis setting them apart from modern news reporting 74 The radio would however soon be eclipsed by broadcast television starting in the 1950s Television Edit Main article News broadcasting Starting in the 1940s United States broadcast television channels would air 10 to 15 minute segments of news programming one or two times per evening The era of live TV news coverage would begin in the 1960s with the assassination of John F Kennedy broadcast and reported to live on a variety of nationally syndicated television channels During the 60s and 70s television channels would begin adding regular morning or midday news shows Starting in 1980 with the establishment of CNN news channels began providing 24 hour news coverage a format which persists through today Digital age Edit Journalists at a press conference The role and status of journalism as well as mass media has undergone changes over the last two decades together with the advancement of digital technology and publication of news on the Internet This has created a shift in the consumption of print media channels as people increasingly consume news through e readers smartphones and other electronic devices News organizations are challenged to fully monetize their digital wing as well as improvise on the context in which they publish in print Newspapers have seen print revenues sink at a faster pace than the rate of growth for digital revenues 2 Notably in the American media landscape newsrooms have reduced their staff and coverage as traditional media channels such as television grappling with declining audiences For example between 2007 and 2012 CNN edited its story packages into nearly half of their original time length 75 The compactness in coverage has been linked to broad audience attrition 75 According to the Pew Research Center the circulation for U S newspapers has fallen sharply in the 21st century 76 The digital era also introduced journalism whose development is done by ordinary citizens with the rise of citizen journalism being possible through the Internet Using video camera equipped smartphones active citizens are now enabled to record footage of news events and upload them onto channels like YouTube which is often discovered and used by mainstream news media outlets News from a variety of online sources like blogs and other social media results in a wider choice of official and unofficial sources rather than only traditional media organizations Journalist interviewing a cosplayer Demographics in 2016 Edit A worldwide sample of 27 500 journalists in 67 countries in 2012 2016 produced the following profile 77 57 percent male Mean age of 38 Mean years of experience 13 College degree 56 percent graduate degree 29 percent 61 percent specialized in journalism communications at college 62 percent identified as generalists and 23 percent as hard news beat journalists 47 percent were members of a professional association 80 percent worked full time 50 percent worked in print 23 percent in television 17 percent in radio and 16 percent online Ethics and standards EditMain article Journalism ethics and standards News photographers and reporters waiting behind a police line in New York City in May 1994 While various existing codes have some differences most share common elements including the principles of truthfulness accuracy objectivity impartiality fairness and public accountability as these apply to the acquisition of newsworthy information and its subsequent dissemination to the public 78 79 80 81 82 Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel propose several guidelines for journalists in their book The Elements of Journalism 83 Their view is that journalism s first loyalty is to the citizenry and that journalists are thus obliged to tell the truth and must serve as an independent monitor of powerful individuals and institutions within society In this view the essence of journalism is to provide citizens with reliable information through the discipline of verification Some journalistic Codes of Ethics notably the European ones 84 also include a concern with discriminatory references in news based on race religion sexual orientation and physical or mental disabilities 85 86 87 88 The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe approved in 1993 Resolution 1003 on the Ethics of Journalism which recommends journalists to respect the presumption of innocence in particular in cases that are still sub judice 89 In the UK all newspapers are bound by the Code of Practice of the Independent Press Standards Organisation This includes points like respecting people s privacy and ensuring accuracy However the Media Standards Trust has criticized the PCC claiming it needs to be radically changed to secure the public trust of newspapers This is in stark contrast to the media climate prior to the 20th century where the media market was dominated by smaller newspapers and pamphleteers who usually had an overt and often radical agenda with no presumption of balance or objectivity Because of the pressure on journalists to report news promptly and before their competitors factual errors occur more frequently than in writing produced and edited under less time pressure Thus a typical issue of a major daily newspaper may contain several corrections of articles published the previous day Perhaps the most famous journalistic mistake caused by time pressure was the Dewey Defeats Truman edition of the Chicago Daily Tribune based on early election returns that failed to anticipate the actual result of the 1948 US presidential election Codes of ethics Edit There are over 242 codes of ethics in journalism that vary across various regions of the world 90 The codes of ethics are created through an interaction of different groups of people such as the public and journalists themselves Most of the codes of ethics serve as a representation of the economic and political beliefs of the society where the code was written 90 Despite the fact that there are a variety of codes of ethics some of the core elements present in all codes are remaining objective providing the truth and being honest 90 Journalism does not have a universal code of conduct individuals are not legally obliged to follow a certain set of rules like a doctor or a lawyer does 91 There have been discussions for creating a universal code of conduct in journalism One suggestion centers on having three claims for credibility justifiable consequence and the claim of humanity 92 Within the claim of credibility journalists are expected to provide the public with reliable and trustworthy information and allowing the public to question the nature of the information and its acquisition The second claim of justifiable consequences centers on weighing the benefits and detriments of a potentially harmful story and acting accordingly An example of justifiable consequence is exposing a professional with dubious practices on the other hand acting within justifiable consequence means writing compassionately about a family in mourning The third claim is the claim of humanity which states that journalists are writing for a global population and therefore must serve everyone globally in their work avoiding smaller loyalties to country city etc 92 Legal status EditMain articles Freedom of the press and Media law Turkish journalists protesting imprisonment of their colleagues on Human Rights Day 10 December 2016 Number of journalists reported killed between 2002 and 2013 93 Governments have widely varying policies and practices towards journalists which control what they can research and write and what press organizations can publish Some governments guarantee the freedom of the press while other nations severely restrict what journalists can research or publish Journalists in many nations have some privileges that members of the general public do not including better access to public events crime scenes and press conferences and to extended interviews with public officials celebrities and others in the public eye Journalists who elect to cover conflicts whether wars between nations or insurgencies within nations often give up any expectation of protection by government if not giving up their rights to protection from the government Journalists who are captured or detained during a conflict are expected to be treated as civilians and to be released to their national government Many governments around the world target journalists for intimidation harassment and violence because of the nature of their work 94 Right to protect confidentiality of sources Edit Main article Protection of sources Journalists interaction with sources sometimes involves confidentiality an extension of freedom of the press giving journalists a legal protection to keep the identity of a confidential informant private even when demanded by police or prosecutors withholding their sources can land journalists in contempt of court or in jail In the United States there is no right to protect sources in a federal court However federal courts will refuse to force journalists to reveal their sources unless the information the court seeks is highly relevant to the case and there s no other way to get it State courts provide varying degrees of such protection Journalists who refuse to testify even when ordered to can be found in contempt of court and fined or jailed On the journalistic side of keeping sources confidential there is also a risk to the journalist s credibility because there can be no actual confirmation of whether the information is valid As such it is highly discouraged for journalists to have confidential sources 95 See also EditCitizen journalism Fourth Estate Glossary of journalism Investigative journalism Hallin s spheres History of American newspapers History of journalism Journalism school Journalism ethics and standards Journalism genres Lists of journalists List of journalism awards Non profit journalism Journalistic objectivity Sensor journalism Sports journalism Reviews Edit American Journalism Review Columbia Journalism Review Health News Review Ryerson Review of JournalismAcademic journals Edit Journalism Practice Journalism Studies Journalism Digital JournalismReferences Edit 10 Most Censored Countries Committee to Protect Journalists 2 May 2012 page retrieved 23 May 2013 a b Circulation revenue fall for US newspapers overall despite gains for some The FTC s Endorsement Guides What People Are Asking 7 September 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Standards and Ethics Retrieved 1 May 2018 What Is an Op Ed Article The Balance Small Business Retrieved 16 May 2022 McChesney Robert W 1 October 2012 Farewell to Journalism Journalism Practice 6 5 6 614 26 doi 10 1080 17512786 2012 683273 ISSN 1751 2786 S2CID 149010028 Thomson T J 2018 The Evolution of Story How Time and Modality Affect Visual and Verbal Narratives PDF Visual Communication Quarterly 25 4 4 199 210 doi 10 1080 15551393 2018 1498742 S2CID 149906671 Harcup 2009 p 4 Stone Gerald C O Donnell Mary K Banning Stephen 1 January 1997 Public perceptions of a newspaper s watchdog role Newspaper Research Journal 18 1 2 86 102 doi 10 1177 073953299701800108 S2CID 107456650 Corcoran Mark 21 February 2012 Drone journalism takes off Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 25 March 2012 Gonzo Journalism Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 14 October 2012 a b c Willnat Lars 2014 The American Journalist in the Digital Age Key Findings PDF 86 of Americans get news online from smartphone computer or tablet Pew Research Center Retrieved 30 September 2021 Robinson Sue 2011 Journalism as Process The Organizational Implications of Participatory Online News Journalism amp Communication Monographs 13 3 137 doi 10 1177 152263791101300302 S2CID 146669105 Heflin Heflin 2015 The Internet Is Not the Antidote A Cultural Historical Analysis of Journalism s Crisis of Credibility and the Internet as a Remedy Journalism History doi 10 1080 00947679 2015 12059127 S2CID 147655744 US election Fake news becomes the news BBC News 7 November 2016 Retrieved 26 May 2018 Mark Zuckerberg is in denial about how Facebook is harming our politics Vox Retrieved 26 May 2018 Timberg Craig Romm Tony 9 April 2018 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to Capitol Hill It was my mistake and I m sorry The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 26 May 2018 Trump finally admits that fake news just means news he doesn t like Vox Retrieved 26 November 2018 Turkey COVID 19 pandemic increases climate of fear for journalists Amnesty International 1 May 2020 Egypt is more concerned with controlling information than containing the coronavirus The Globe and Mail 3 April 2020 Journalists detained assaulted in India during COVID 19 lockdown Committee to Protect Journalists 28 April 2020 Bangladeshi journalists cartoonist arrested for Covid 19 coverage Reporters Without Borders 14 May 2020 Iran Press freedom violations recounted in real time January 2020 Reporters Without Borders 14 May 2020 Archived from the original on 5 May 2020 Retrieved 17 May 2020 Coronavirus Law Used to Arrest Nigerian Journalist Over Health Story Market Watch 20 April 2020 Archived from the original on 21 May 2020 Retrieved 17 May 2020 Ethiopia Free Speech at Risk Amid Covid 19 Human Rights Watch 6 May 2020 Protect Kenya s Journalists Reporting on Covid 19 Human Rights Watch 4 May 2020 Authorities across West Africa attacking journalists covering COVID 19 pandemic IFEX 22 April 2020 Concern for Rights in Montenegro amid COVID 19 Fight Balkan Insight 26 March 2020 Kazakh journalists harassed over Covid 19 reporting Reporters Without Borders 30 April 2020 Azerbaijan Crackdown on Critics Amid Pandemic Human Rights Watch 16 April 2020 Malaysian journalist faces six years in prison over COVID 19 Facebook posts Committee to Protect Journalists 5 May 2020 Singapore s Fake News and Contempt Laws a Threat to Media Journalists Say Voice of America 6 May 2020 Some leaders use pandemic to sharpen tools against critics ABC News 16 April 2020 Somali Journalists Arrested Intimidated While Covering COVID 19 Voice of America 18 April 2020 Hartmut Walravens The Early East Asian Press in the Eyes of the West Some bibliographical notes World Library and Information Congress 72nd General Conference and Council of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions IFLA 20 24 August 2006 Seoul Korea p 2 Infelise Mario Roman Avvisi Information and Politics in the Seventeenth Century Court and Politics in Papal Rome 1492 1700 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 212 214 216 17 Brook Timothy 1998 The Confusions of Pleasure Commerce and Culture in Ming China Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22154 0 Paperback p xxi Leveson Inquiry British press freedom is a model for the world editor tells inquiry The Telegraph 14 October 2017 Archived from the original on 7 October 2011 First Journalism School Columbia University of Missouri Press p 1 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Nurit Schleifman A Russian Daily Newspaper and Its New Readership Severnaia Pchela 1825 1840 Cahiers du monde russe et sovietique 1987 127 44 William Sloan and Julie Hedgepeth Williams The early American press 1690 1783 1994 Vaughn ed Encyclopedia of American Journalism 2008 pp 17 21 Carol Sue Humphrey This popular engine New England newspapers during the American Revolution 1775 1789 1992 Richard L Kaplan Politics and the American press The rise of objectivity 1865 1920 Cambridge University Press 2002 p 78 Keith Michael Baker et al The French Revolution and the Creation of Modern Political Culture The transformation of the political culture 1789 1848 1989 Sperber Jonathan Rhineland Radicals The Democratic Movement and the Revolution of 1848 Princeton 1991 p 99 Daniel Balmuth The Russian Bulletin 1863 1917 A Liberal Voice in Tsarist Russia 2000 Charles A Ruus Fighting Words Imperial Censorship and the Russian Press 1804 1906 1982 Franz Osterroth Dieter Schuster Chronik der deutschen Sozialdemokratie J H W Dietz Nachf Hannover 1963 S 50 fes de German text John Tebbel 2003 Print Media France Encyclopedia Americana Retrieved 1 November2014 Stephen MacKinnon Toward a History of the Chinese Press in the Republican Period Modern China 23 1 1997 pp 3 32 Timothy B Weston China professional journalism and liberal internationalism in the era of the First World War Pacific Affairs 83 2 2010 327 47 Hutton 2 692 94 P P Catterall and Colin Seymour Ure Northcliffe Viscount in John Ramsden ed The Oxford Companion to Twentieth Century British Politics 2002 p 475 Oxford Dictionary of Quotations 1975 Clare Hollingworth British war correspondent dies aged 105 BBC News 10 January 2017 Clare Hollingworth Reporter Who Broke News of World War II Dies at 105 The New York Times 10 January 2017 a b George Orwell and the eternal truths of good journalism The Guardian Retrieved 19 July 2021 Richard Lee Kaplan Politics and the American press the rise of objectivity 1865 1920 2002 p 76 Frank Luther Mott American Journalism A History 1690 1960 Macmillan 3rd ed 1962 pp 603 05 Mott American Journalism 3rd ed 1962 pp 605 08 Hedges Chris 2009 Empire of Illusion The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle Nation Books ISBN 1 56858 613 2 p 146 Zinn Howard A People s History of the United States New York Harper Perennial Modern Classics 2005 p 671 ISBN 0 06 083865 5 Scammell Margaret Semetko Holli 11 22 2017 The Media Journalism and Democracy 1st ed London Routiedge p 482 ISBN 978 1 351 74711 0 Charles A Simmons The African American press a history of news coverage during national crises with special reference to four black newspapers 1827 1965 McFarland 2006 Patrick S Washburn The African American Newspaper Voice of Freedom 2006 Rush Morgan 28 September 2017 How Long Do You Go to School to Be a Journalist Career Trend Retrieved 12 October 2021 2022 Best Journalism Schools www collegefactual com Retrieved 12 October 2021 Noortje Marres The issues deserve more credit Pragmatist contributions to the study of public involvement in the controversy Social studies of science 37 5 2007 759 80 Davis Buzz Merritt Maxwell E McCombs 2014 The Two W s of Journalism The Why and What of Public Affairs Reporting Routledge p 21 ISBN 978 1 135 70471 1 Carl Bybee Can democracy survive in the post factual age A return to the Lippmann Dewey debate about the politics of news Journalism amp Communication Monographs 1 1 1999 28 66 Alfred Hermida et al The active recipient Participatory journalism through the lens of the Dewey Lippmann debate International Symposium on Online Journalism 1 2 2011 Stephen Lovell Broadcasting Bolshevik The radio voice of Soviet culture 1920s 1950s Journal of Contemporary History 48 1 2013 78 97 a b The State of the News Media 2013 An Annual Report in American Journalism Archived 26 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine the Pew Research Center s Project for Excellence in Journalism 2 May 2012 Retrieved 23 May 2013 Despite subscription surges for largest U S newspapers circulation and revenue fall for industry overall 1 June 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Thomas Hanitzsch et al eds Worlds of Journalism Journalistic Cultures around the Globe 2019 pp 73 74 see excerpt Fourth Estate Core Journalism Principles Standards and Practices Fourth Estate Public Benefit Corporation Archived from the original on 25 March 2019 Retrieved 2 December 2016 IFJ International Federation of Journalists Declaration of Principles on the Conduct of Journalists Archived 14 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine DOC version ASNE American Society of Newspapers Editors Statement of Principles Archived from the original on 5 June 2008 Retrieved 1 March 2013 APME Associated Press Managing Editors Statement of Ethical Principles 22 June 2008 Archived from the original on 22 June 2008 Retrieved 1 March 2013 Society of Professional Journalists Code of Ethics SPJ Retrieved 1 March 2013 The Elements of Journalism What Newspeople Should Know and the Public Should Expect Introduction Project for Excellence in Journalism PEJ Journalism org 19 June 2006 Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Retrieved 23 February 2013 Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Resolution 1003 1993 on the ethics of journalism see clause 33 Archived 26 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine UK Press Complaints Commission Codes of Practice see item 12 Discrimination Archived 14 December 2012 at the Wayback Machine Italy FNSI s La Carta dei Doveri The Chart of Duties in Italian Archived from the original on 12 April 2008 Retrieved 24 December 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link section Principi in Spanish Spain FAPE s Codigo Deontologico Deontological Code see Principios Generales item 7 a Brazil FENAJ s Code of Ethics PDF in Portuguese Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2009 20 8 KB see Article 6 item XIV PACE Resolution 1003 1993 on the Ethics of Journalism Archived 26 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine see clause 22 a b c Yang Aimei Taylor Maureen Saffer Adam J 1 March 2016 Ethical convergence divergence or communitas An examination of public relations and journalism codes of ethics Public Relations Review 42 1 146 60 doi 10 1016 j pubrev 2015 08 001 ISSN 0363 8111 Wilson Smith Anthony 3 August 1998 The Conflict of Journalists Maclean s 11 via Academic Search Complete a b Ward Stephen 5 March 2018 Philosophical Foundations for Global Journalism Ethics Journal of Mass Media Ethics 20 3 21 doi 10 1207 s15327728jmme2001 2 S2CID 144636048 Gohdes AR Carey SC March 2017 Canaries in a coal mine What the killings of journalists tell us about future repression Journal of Peace Research 54 2 157 74 doi 10 1177 0022343316680859 PMC 5427995 PMID 28546646 Press Freedom Online Committee to Protect Journalists Lashmar Paul 3 July 2017 No More Sources The impact of Snowden s revelations on journalists and their confidential sources Journalism Practice 11 6 665 688 doi 10 1080 17512786 2016 1179587 ISSN 1751 2786 S2CID 147752393 Sources Edit Harcup Tony 2009 Journalism Principles and Practice Thousand Oaks California SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 84787 250 0 OCLC 280437077Further reading Editde Beer Arnold S and John C Merrill eds Global Journalism Topical Issues and Media Systems 5th ed 2008 Hanitzsch Thomas et al eds Worlds of Journalism Journalistic Cultures around the Globe 2019 online review Kaltenbrunner Andy and Matthias Karmasin and Daniela Kraus eds The Journalism Report V Innovation and Transition Facultas 2017 Marthoz J P 2016 Giving up on the graft and the grind Why journalists are failing to cover difficult stories Index on Censorship 45 2 22 27 Quick Amanda C ed World Press Encyclopedia A Survey of Press Systems Worldwide 2nd ed 2 vol 2002 2500 pp highly detailed coverage of every country large and small Rodgers Ronald R 2018 The Struggle for the Soul of Journalism The Pulpit Versus the Press 1833 1923 Columbia Missouri University of Missouri Press Rutherfurd Livingston John Peter Zenger His Press His Trial and a Bibliography of Zenger Imprints Gloucester Mass Peter Smith 1963 Shoemaker Pamela J and Akiba A Cohen eds News Around the World Content Practitioners and the Public 2nd ed 2005 Sloan W David Mullikin Parcell Lisa eds 2002 American Journalism History Principles Practices McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 5155 5 Sterling Christopher H ed Encyclopedia of journalism 6 vol SAGE 2009 External links EditJournalism at Curlie Portals Current events JournalismJournalism at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Resources from Wikiversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Journalism amp oldid 1151726409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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