Journalism Without Profit
Making News When the Market Fails
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 19 July 2018
- ISBN 9780190875602
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages264 pages
- Size 160x236x22 mm
- Weight 590 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
As mainstream journalism wanes, news nonprofits attempt to fill the gap by providing the kind of quality information that is essential to our democracy. This book explores the emergent behaviors of sharing and collaboration that allow them to do so, and their potential for success or failure in the 21st-century.
MoreLong description:
The last decade has witnessed a dramatic decline in the presence and influence of legacy news organizations. This decline has led to tremendous growth in news startups, which have attempted to fill the gap left by their legacy counterparts by producing the quality public service journalism upon which the health of U.S. democracy depends. If legacy news organizations, with their existing infrastructure, are failing, can these startups do any better? This question lies at the heart of Journalism Without Profit.
Magda Konieczna explores three prominent news nonprofits: the Center for Public Integrity, one of the oldest and largest of its kind; the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, a university-based watchdog news organization that relies on others to publish its work; and MinnPost, an online news website. Through in-depth study of the practices of each newsroom, Konieczna isolates one common behavior that will contribute to their success: the way these organizations collaborate and share stories. Though this emergent behavior differentiates news nonprofits from the mainstream journalism from which they arose, it also ties the two forms of journalism together, as news nonprofits attempt to share stories with mainstream publications. In other words, the very behavior that may enable these organizations to do better than their mainstream counterparts also limits their ability to evolve much beyond them.
In one of the first major books to focus on nonprofit journalism, Konieczna investigates the major questions that will open the field up to further study. Where did nonprofit news come from, and where is it going? Who funds it, and why? Ultimately, Konieczna offers a new way to think about the seismic changes in journalism that are defining the 21st-century.
Is non-profit journalism here to stay? This book explains the financial and the cultural challenges of the future of journalism and demystifies one of the most important possible solutions.
Table of Contents:
Preface
Acknowledgments
'Afflict the Comfortable': Journalism's Public Service Role
The Economics of Public Service Journalism
Who Holds the Purse Strings
Sharing the News
'Old School Journalism by Old School Rules': Implications of News Sharing
Epilogue: A Look Ahead
References
Index