Hyperlocal Journalism
The decline of local newspapers and the rise of online community news

Gespeichert in:

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Beteiligte: Harte, David (VerfasserIn), Howells, Rachel, Williams, Andy
veröffentlicht: Taylor & Francis Ltd. 2019
Medientyp: Buch, E-Book

Nicht angemeldet

Diese Neuerscheinung können Sie zur Leihe bestellen, wenn Sie angemeldet sind.

Noch keinen Account? Jetzt registrieren
weitere Informationen
Umfang: 210; 21 Illustrationen; 159 x 234
ISBN: 9781138674547
Schlagwörter:
Kollektion: PDA Print VUB
Inhaltsangabe

In the wake of the withdrawal of commercial journalism from local communities at the beginning of the 21st century, Hyperlocal Journalism critically explores the development of citizen-led community news operations. -- The book draws together a wide range of original research by way of case studies, interviews, and industry and policy analysis, to give a complete view of what is happening to communities as their local newspapers close or go into decline to be replaced by emerging forms of digital news provision. This study takes the United Kingdom as its focus but its findings speak to common issues found in local media systems in other Western democracies. The authors investigate who is producing hyperlocal news and why, as well as production practices, models of community and participatory journalism, and the economics of hyperlocal operations. -- Looking holistically at hyperlocal news, Hyperlocal Journalism paints a vivid picture of citizens creating their own news services via social media and on free blogging platforms to hold power to account, redress negative reputational geographies, and to tell everyday stories of community life. The book also raises key questions about the sustainability of such endeavours in the face of optimism from commentators and policy-makers.

Introduction, 1. Hyperlocal news in context 2. The withdrawal of local and regional news journalism 3. Inside a news black hole – a case study of a town with no newspaper 4. From lost pets to local corruption: what gets covered in hyperlocal news 5. Practising hyperlocal journalism – authenticity and reciprocity 6. Inside the hyperlocal newsroom 7. Sustaining hyperlocal journalism, Conclusion