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Id 790
Author Engelke K.M.
Title Online participatory journalism: A systematic literature review
Reference

Engelke K.M.; Online participatory journalism: A systematic literature review ;Media and Communication vol:7.0 issue: 4.0 page:31.0

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85077611380&doi=10.17645%2fmac.v7i4.2250&partnerID=40&md5=8260b310c2e717cf62fc6b2fe826ea47
Abstract This article presents a systematic literature review of 378 studies (1997–2017) on online participatory journalism, i.e., audience participation in the professional news production process. Participation can challenge established understandings of journalism and affect the relationship between journalists and audience members as peripheral actors due to the increasingly blurred boundaries between these actors and the renegotiation of authority and power. The review captures research practices regarding the theoretical, conceptual and empirical approach as well as results pertaining to the impact participation has on the journalist–audience relationship and is both interdisciplinary and global in nature. The results show that research mostly focuses on journalism in Europe and North America and examines participation in the interpretation stage rather than in the formation or dissemination stage of the news production process. Longitudinal and comparative studies, examinations of regional and local participation, in-depth audience studies as well as analyses of participation in all three production stages are rare. 121 studies explicitly deal with participation’s impact on the journalist–audience relationship and produce conflicting results: 51% see journalists retaining control over news production process; 42% see shared power; and 7% see mixed results. Notably, power structures differ depending on the examined world region, production stage, and actor perspective. The review illustrates the status quo of research practices as well as the role the audience as peripheral actors play in the news production process and concludes with five observations about the field as well as future avenues to close identified research gaps. © 2019, Cogitatio Press. All rights reserved.


Results:


Smaller Distance better similarity

Id View Author Title Distance
793 View Peters C., Witschge T. From grand narratives of democracy to small expectations of participation: Audiences, citizenship, and interactive tools in digital journalism 91.488
792 View Picone I., Courtois C., Paulussen S. When news is everywhere: Understanding participation, cross-mediality and mobility in journalism from a radical user perspective 99.1008
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129 View Belfiore, E., ; Bennett, O., Rethinking the Social Impacts of the Arts 117.579
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910 View Frieze J. Reframing immersive theatre: The politics and pragmatics of participatory performance 121.51
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674 View Delrieu V., Gibson L. Libraries and the geography of use: how does geography and asset “attractiveness” influence the local dimensions of cultural participation? 127.688
630 View Paschild C. Community archives and the limitations of identity: Considering discursive impact on material needs 128.245
898 View Ryan H.E., Flinders M. From senseless to sensory democracy: Insights from applied and participatory theatre 128.86
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