Fr. 85.00

Transparency and Journalism - A Critical Appraisal of a Disruptive Norm

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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List of contents

Preface and Acknowledgements
1 Transparency and its Connection to Journalism
1.1 Transparency: Essence, Purpose, and How it Made its Way into Journalism
1.2 The Fragile Theoretical and Empirical Foundation of Transparency in Journalism
1.3 Transparency as Ritual in Journalistic Practice
1.4 Theoretical Points of Departure Influencing the Book
1.5 The Imagined Audience, Structure, and Content of the Book
2 Journalistic Transparency in History and Context
2.1 The Emergence and Solidification of Transparency
2.2 The Philosophical Roots of Transparency in Liberal Democratic Theory
2.3 Comparing the Transparency Dimension in Governmental and Journalistic Institutions
2.4 The Implicit Theory of Transparency
2.5 The Performative Transparency Model
2.6 Black Box and Glass Box
2.7 Summary
3 Can You See the Sunlight? Transparency at Work
3.1 Can You See the Sunlight?
3.2 Journalistic Actors
3.3 Content: Stage, Aesthetics, and Delivery
3.4 The Public
3.5 … And transparency for all?
3.6 Transparency in Practice: Not Much Sunlight Thus Far
4 Algorithmic Forms of Transparency and Opacity
4.1 The Increasing Role of Algorithms in Journalism
4.2 Russian Dolls: Black Boxes Inside Other Black Boxes, Inside…
4.3 Unpacking the Role of Algorithms in Transparent Journalistic Performance
4.4 Computer Says No
5 The Limits of the Transparency Myth
5.1 Inevitable Cost/Benefit Trade-Offs
5.2 The Need for Professional Discretion and the Ever-Present Curtain and Backstage
5.3 Transparency as the Opposite of Trust
5.4 Transparency is not Openness
5.5 A Successful Flop: How Transparency was Adopted Despite a Lack of Evidence
5.6 What is Left of Transparency?
6 Transparency After All?
6.1 Three Waves of Transparency in Journalism
6.2 Transparency Pathways
6.3 Targeted Transparency
6.4 Suggestions for a Future Research Agenda
6.5 Not so Disruptive After All

About the author

Michael Karlsson is professor in media and communication at Karlstad University, Sweden. His research interest lies primarily within digital journalism and his work has been widely published in journals such as Digital Journalism, Journalism Studies, Journalism, Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, and Communication Theory.

Summary

This book offers a comprehensive, authoritative, and accessible introduction to journalistic transparency.

Product details

Authors Michael Karlsson, Karlsson Michael
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.08.2021
 
EAN 9780367356163
ISBN 978-0-367-35616-3
No. of pages 128
Series Disruptions
Subjects Non-fiction book > Politics, society, business > Society
Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Media science

Media Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, Press & journalism, News media and journalism, Media studies: Journalism

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