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Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture (WPCC)
www.westminster.ac.uk/wpcc

Call for papers

News Journalism in Transition

Volume 5, Number 2, June 2008


In a time of rapid technical, social, and economic developments, news
journalism is undergoing dramatic changes.

Blogs, citizen journalism and user generated content mark new ways of
disseminating news; creating an overlap between the production and
consumption of both online and offline news media.

Blogging, making news and consuming news are intersecting activities for
professional journalists as well as audience members. This creates a novel
yet complicated situation.

Are citizen journalism and related developments changing the public sphere?
Are traditional quality standards within news journalism issues of the past?
Does participation in the generation of news embody audience empowerment?

In this changing journalistic climate, traditional news media seem to be on
the verge of a ‘crisis’. Particularly the oldest of the mass media, the
newspaper, is facing mounting pressure due to harsh competition for
audiences both online and offline.

As a response, newspapers and print media are turning to new formats and
audiences, posing challenges to theory within journalism and media studies.
Are we facing the birth of a new kind of newspaper within a new kind of news
journalism?

Clearly, traditional concepts relating to the role of news journalism in
society and democracy need to be re-considered in view of the current
developments.

This WPCC issue examines news journalism in its changing surroundings.

We welcome national, trans-national and comparative contributions from
around the world which explore a range of theoretical, empirical, and
methodological perspectives.

Submissions may focus on, but are not limited to, the following areas of
interest:

Contemporary features of news journalism in different parts of the world:

- The ‘crisis’/future of newspapers and traditional news journalism

- Changing markets and formats for news journalism

- Citizen journalism and blogging

- The relationship between online and offline news journalism

Theoretical and empirical considerations of the developments; relating to
democracy, social change and the meaning of news in contemporary society:

- What is to be considered ‘journalism’ today?

- Rethinking/applying traditional theoretical concepts to the current situation

- Issues of cultural citizenship and democratic participation

- Uses of newspapers today

 
Applicants may submit abstracts of no more than 250 words to Sofia
Johansson, [log in to unmask] and Mascha Brichta, [log in to unmask]

The deadline for abstracts is 10 December 2007.

Full papers are required by 1 April 2008.
 

Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture (WPCC) is online at
www.westminster.ac.uk/wpcc
where you can download all the published articles free of charge.

Latest publications:

Volume 4

Number 3 - September 2007
Broadcasting Policy and Globalisation
http://www.wmin.ac.uk/mad/page-1716

Number 2 - September 2007
The Media and Phenomenology
http://www.wmin.ac.uk/mad/page-1715