democracy


Nieman Journalism Lab: Opening up journalism’s boundaries to bring change back in: How Knight and its News Challenge have evolved

Tuesday, 29 June 2010, 11:06

"[The Knight Foundation] has sought to innovate journalism in part by stepping away from it, by making a strategic shift from 'journalism' to 'information.' This broadening of boundaries has created crucial space for innovators — from inside and outside journalism — to set forth a reformed view of what journalism is and ought to be. … If the 'problem' for journalism in an era of digital disruption was the need to find new or refurbished models through which journalism’s core functions and societal benefits could be achieved — to 'meet the information needs of communities,' in the foundation’s common refrain — then Knight was making a break from its past in turning away from faith in industry expertise and toward an acknowledgement that the solutions may well come from the aggregate expertise of a participatory crowd of contributors."

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The Independent: Demise of news barons is just a Marxist fantasy

Monday, 4 January 2010, 07:48

Yet another very odd column from Tim Luckhurst: "Citizen journalism's most devout evangelists are wrong. Their wisdom is purely ideological. In fact, the people who now predict the end of professional journalism's reign of sovereignty have attacked edited, fact-based reporting for decades. They think it is as an ideological invention created to sell myths to the masses. … Forget it. Professional journalism will survive because it is necessary and the market will find a way to supply it. People who claim otherwise only pretend that their mission is prediction. In fact, they are working to mould the future to match a postmodern Marxist fantasy. "

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Online Journalism Blog: The impact of newspaper closures on independent local journalism and access to local information

Thursday, 30 April 2009, 06:38

Alex Lockwood: "The problem for existing traditional newspapers is that it is not part of their business model to innovate ways for local people to engage directly with the democratic process. … Other (and often better) ways to access information within local communities, including news and issues of local democracy, already exist. It was not a local newspaper that developed www.theyworkforyou.com"

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Independent: Democracy can’t exist without newspapers

Monday, 2 March 2009, 13:57

Tim Luckhurst: "Devolved Scotland is a new and fragile polity in which debate takes place within a narrow consensus. Its electoral system privileges party over electorate and the ruling elite is self-selecting and jealous of its privileges. The country's broadcasters are ill equipped to fill the vacuum left by its failing newspapers."

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Journalism.co.uk: ‘Democratic legitimation via the web is not enough’, says Clay Shirky

Wednesday, 4 February 2009, 08:59

"Shirky says he previously made certain assumptions about the result of what he calls 'crowd wisdom' and its positive impact for democracy. Now he believes that public pressure via the internet could be 'just another implementation layer for special interest groups'."

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CJR: Interview with Clay Shirky, Part II

Monday, 22 December 2008, 21:06

Clay Shirky: "I don’t trust the current generation of newspapers to actually mean what they say when they talk about civic mission, because none of them are saying, 'We were in a hurry to get out from under this poor-profit model that’s preventing us from living up to that civic function.'”

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The Observer: Tabloids must be free to offend

Sunday, 16 November 2008, 12:14

Peter Preston: "The right of the public – broadly, not narrowly, defined; Joe as well as Polly Public – to have the news they want in the way they want it. And those who seek to deny that right automatically join hands with Salisbury on the first Daily Mail so long ago. They say that only sentient, refined people like us – like me, like Max Mosley – should have newspapers that match their interests."

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Adrian Monck: Journalism’s functions in a democracy

Tuesday, 7 October 2008, 21:26

"What are the functions of journalism in a democracy? In an article probably drawn from his forthcoming book, Why Democracies Need An Unlovable Press, (order yours now) Michael Schudson gives six:

1. Informing the public
2. Investigation
3. Analysis
4. Social surveillance
5. Public forum
6. Mobilization"

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