Browsing by Subject "journalism"

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  • Radcliffe, Damian (What's New In Publishing, 2021-11-17)
    Newly revised for 2021, this report is an essential, exhaustive look at the multiple revenue opportunities available to publishers today, from new ideas to existing strategies. Topics include: Subscriptions, paywalls, and ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian; Mathews, Nick (Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, 2023-04-20)
    This paper plays out against a backdrop of continued closures and diminished local news reporting across much of the United States. It explores the role that media policy can and should play in supporting local journalism. ...
  • Hutcherson, Ella (University of Oregon, 2023)
    This thesis explores how engaged, or community-centered, journalism might best meet the needs of social natives, or people currently ages 18-24, who have different and more hyper-personalized engagement patterns than their ...
  • McNeil, Kira (University of Oregon, 2021)
    Ever since the late journalist Anthony Bourdain popularized the genre in 2002, food and travel television has dominated our screens. These shows typically feature a host or hosts traveling far and wide, trying out cuisines ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian (What's New In Publishing, 2022-02-18)
    The eCommerce bump witnessed over the last two years looks set to be a revenue trend that will only grow in importance for publishers. According to Group M, by 2024 retail-focused eCommerce will amount to $7 trillion in ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian (Thomson Reuters Foundation, 2021)
    This report explores the untold story of how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South. It’s a story told not only through the insights of industry leaders, ...
  • Lewis, Seth C. (Wiley, 2019)
    This entry seeks to synthesize the many definitions of journalism. Struggles over defining what qualifies as journalism and who qualifies as a journalist are more than discursive disputes; they are key points of departure ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian; Wallace, Ryan (Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism, 2022-01-04)
    The observations in this report are based on an online survey conducted between Tuesday, August 4, 2020 and Tuesday, September 8, 2020. We received 324 eligible responses from a mix of editors, reporters, publishers, ...
  • Jaques Prentice, Kate (University of Oregon, 2023)
    This thesis will delve into the complexities of the modern “infodemic.” In a world formatted around social media, misinformation and disinformation have multiplied at an uncontrollable rate: to the extent that people can ...
  • Bryant, Chloe (University of Oregon, 2022)
    This thesis is a presentation of three solutions journalism stories produced by me and published in student-run magazines over the course of one year. Each story relates to food in some way and discusses how community ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian (What's New in Publishing, 2019)
    Selling products related to publisher activities is nothing new. But over recent years, the breadth, range, and scope of eCommerce opportunities available to publishers has expanded greatly. This report looks in-depth ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian (What's New In Publishing, 2020)
    This free-to-download report brings together the best examples of how media organisations have risen to meet the challenges of COVID-19. It looks at a range of tips and tactics to help all kinds of publishers, from ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian; Lawrence, Regina; DeVigal, Andrew (Agora Journalism Center, 2023-09-21)
    This forward-thinking report makes the case for embracing a more inclusive, community-focused model of journalism, one that prioritizes listening to and collaborating with communities to produce relevant, equitable and ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian (The Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS), 2021-10)
    It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a media company in possession of a good fortune (an audience, brand recognition and decent revenues), must (still) be in want of innovation. The pace of change in our industry ...
  • Radcliffe, Damian; Nel, François; Henriksson, Teemu; Roper, Dean (WAN-IFRA (World Association of News Publishers), 2024-01-25)
    After the sobering read seen in our 2022-23 report, this year’s World Press Trends study strikes a more cautiously optimistic note, with more than half of the respondents conveying a positive outlook about their companies’ ...

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