- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Business / Economics
Full Description
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?
Newsworkers takes 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.
Contents
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