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E-grāmata: News Agencies: Anachronism or Lifeblood of the Media System?

  • Formāts: 136 pages
  • Sērija : Disruptions
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000580860
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  • Formāts: 136 pages
  • Sērija : Disruptions
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000580860
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This book explores the role of international news agencies and investigates whether they have been able to adapt to the contemporary media landscape following the disruption wrought by fake news, social media and an increasingly polarised public discourse.

News Agencies addresses the key players in the industry, beginning with the big three (Reuters, The Associated Press and Agence France-Presse) and then moving on to the newest global player, Bloomberg. It also explores the role of alternative providers of international news which are seeking to challenge the Western-centric perspective of the agencies. Drawing on interviews with senior editors, Jukes investigates the challenges agencies face in terms of their editorial strategy and business models in todays social media context. At a time when there is widespread distrust in the media and agencies are relying increasingly on user-generated content as a source for news, Jukes critically explores the role of these agencies in the debate over fake news and policies on objectivity, impartiality and verification.

Shedding light on a sector of the news industry that has steadfastly remained out of the public spotlight, this book will be of interest to students and academics in the fields of journalism and media studies.
Acknowledgements x
Introduction: News agencies - a world unto themselves 1(14)
Introduction
1(1)
Breaking news from faraway places
2(2)
A rich history of scoops
4(5)
Chapter overview
9(3)
Notes
12(1)
References
13(2)
1 From carrier pigeons to social media
15(24)
Introduction
15(1)
Birth of the agencies
16(2)
Establishing news values and norms
18(2)
Competition and the Agency Alliance Treaty
20(1)
Breaking free of government shackles
21(4)
Translating independence into a style and ethos
25(1)
UNESCO and the charge of imperialism
26(1)
Corporate change and the building blocks of today's agency landscape
27(2)
The competition for dominance
29(5)
Conclusion: How the wheels came off
34(1)
Notes
35(1)
References
36(3)
2 Weathering the storm: Can more than 150 years of tradition save the news agencies?
39(20)
Introduction
39(2)
A continual slide in earnings but is there a route to recovery?
41(4)
Adapting to social media and the rush to digital
45(4)
Editorial is the target for cost cutting
49(5)
Who wants plain vanilla news?
54(2)
Conclusion
56(1)
Notes
57(1)
References
58(1)
3 Back to the future: Social media, fact-checking and plain vanilla journalism
59(25)
Introduction
59(1)
Fact-checking takes on new dimensions
60(4)
Fact-checking in practice
64(3)
Still gatekeeping or "gatewatching"?
67(5)
The danger within
72(4)
Covering Trump
76(2)
Conclusion
78(2)
Notes
80(1)
References
81(3)
4 Collaboration, community and state actors
84(22)
Introduction
84(2)
Taking a different approach
86(2)
Breaking the taboo about collaboration
88(5)
A community-based approach
93(4)
Do the soft power players change anything?
97(3)
Conclusion
100(2)
Notes
102(2)
References
104(2)
Conclusion: News agencies - rooted in the past and looking to the future
106(12)
Introduction
106(2)
The last outpost
108(2)
Digging in for the long haul
110(2)
The pitfalls of social media
112(1)
Going back to their roots
113(3)
Notes
116(1)
References
116(2)
Index 118
Stephen Jukes is Emeritus Professor in the Faculty of Media & Communication at Bournemouth University. He worked in Europe, the Middle East and the Americas as a foreign correspondent, regional editor and Global Head of News at the international news agency Reuters before moving into the academic world in 2005. His research focuses on areas of objectivity and emotion in news with an emphasis on conflict journalism and trauma. He is a trustee of the Dart Centre for Journalism & Trauma in Europe and of the Institute for War & Peace Reporting.