Introduction
I.
Conceptual Foundations
1.
News
2.
Journalism
3.
Social Actors
4.
Technological Actants
5.
Audiences
6.
Journalistic Activities
II.
Media Effects
7.
Media Dependency Theory
8.
Framing Theory
9.
Agenda Setting Theory
10.
Priming Theory
11.
News Avoidance and Fatigue
III.
Influences on Journalistic Media
12.
Hierarchy of Influences Model
13.
U.S. Journalistic Culture
14.
News Values
15.
Truth, Bias, and Neutrality
16.
Gender and Racial Gaps
17.
Partisan and Geographic Biases
IV.
Journalism Economics
18.
Commodification of News
19.
Audience Measurement and Bundling
20.
Third-Party Platforms
21.
Non-Profit Journalism
22.
State-Supported Journalism
V.
Journalistic Audiences
23.
Audience Fragmentation
24.
User-Generated Content
25.
Crowdsourcing and Ambient Journalism
26.
Violence Against Journalists
VI.
History of U.S. Journalism
27.
Early U.S. Journalism
28.
Journalism in the 19th Century
29.
Journalism in the Early 20th Century
30.
Journalism After the Early 20th Century
VII.
Journalism Law and Ethics
31.
The First Amendment
32.
Access, Anonymity, and Privacy
33.
Censorship, Copyright, and Incitement
34.
Libel
35.
Professional Codes of Ethics
VIII.
Preparing a News Story
36.
Types of Journalism
37.
Opinion-Based Journalism
38.
Story Ideas
39.
Misinformation and Disinformation
IX.
Sourcing and Verifying Information
40.
News Sources
41.
Identifying Appropriate Sources
42.
Contacting Sources and Arranging Interviews
43.
Generating Good Interview Questions
44.
Conducting Interviews
45.
Verifying Information
X.
Creating Journalistic Content
46.
Leads and Nut Grafs
47.
Story Structures
48.
Quotes and Attribution
49.
Integrating Quantitative Information
50.
Solutions Journalism
XI.
Future of Journalism
51.
Social Media and News Production
52.
Social Media and News Distribution
53.
Computational Journalism
54.
Artificial Intelligence and Automation
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Copyright Notice
Clear History
Built with
from
Grav
and
Hugo
Home
> Categories
category :: Categories