Our RSS feeds
LATEST JOBS:
resize text: decrease text sizereset text size increase text size

Online Journalism News

Journalism in Crisis 09: Media in crisis faces five recurrent problems, says professor

westminster A new set of public interventions, adapted to meet the individual contexts of each country, are needed to remedy recurrent flaws in American and European journalism, Professor James Curran outlined in the first keynote speech of the two-day Journalism in Crisis conference.

Speaking to an audience of students, media professionals and academics at the Westminster University event in association with British Journalism Review, Curran, professor of communications at Goldsmiths University of London said that the net addressed some elements, but not all the weaknesses of modern journalism.

Making distinctions between the way that US and UK news operations work in terms of news culture and public funding and regulation, he identified a 'crisis in media reformism' with five recurrent problems, summarised below:

  • Artificial additives injected into journalism to boost circulation and popularity of news: Curran looked at the Sun's handling of the MMR scare, as a particular example of this.
  • The unrepresentative nature of commercial media: wealthy shareholders, and senior journalists who tend to be more affluent than their audiences, with a more prevalent trend of conservatism, than in the general population.
  • The 'cosy' relationships between media publishers and interested parties: Curran used the example of the New York Times' - which he called the 'finest English language newspaper in the world' - failure to identify problems in the US government's handling of the Iraq war.
  • The 'economies of scale and scope' which distort the 'functioning of democracy': for example, he said, Berlusconi, the Italian Prime Minister and media owner, was able to head a 'plastic party' after the failure to safeguard impartiality and balance.
  • The UK media's focus on national and local news, with less interest in international news: a situation which has being going on for a long time, Curran said.
Examining each of these five problems in the context of the web, Curran said he is not convinced greater online participation would solve them - though he did highlight particular areas of success, for example, the investigative efforts of the Politico news site.

"It would appear that the web is not a self-correcting mechanism," he said. But, he added more optimistically, there was a new 'feedback loop' in place for journalism, not available before the internet.

More coverage of Journalism in Crisis 2009 to follow from Journalism.co.uk. Follow @journalism_live on Twitter. A livestream can be viewed at this link.

Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
events | university of westminster | journalism in crisis 2009 | british journalism review | jic09 |

Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.

Got a story? Email our news team: Laura Oliver; Judith Townend or telephone +44 (0)1273 384290. You can also follow us on Twitter: @journalismnews / @LauraOliver / @JTownend.

Comments

i agree that the artificial additives to the articles to make them more appealing to the public is wrong and should be corrected but if it is corrected then the new papers would get rid of all the articles that would make there papers less wanted or approved of and then we wouldnt be getting any bit of the story. but then there could be the other side where when its corrected the news papers still print the boring stories but then in order to get the revenue up and pay their employees then they have to rely on their advertisers and then you dont get the news about what their advertisers do wrong or what they do that has negative affects.
- 20/05/09

why does the uk not really have a international news ... interest I geuss
- 20/05/09

You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:

    

Forgotten your password? Please click here



JOB OF THE WEEK

Online content producer (full-time contract - six months)

With experience writing for online and working to daily deadlines, expertise in home products and the ability to turn complex technical copy into an online story that answers key consumer questions for Which? ...more

Freelancers for hire

...see all

DISPLAY ADVERTISING

image

Target our journalism community of 17,200 subscribers and 140k+ visitors monthly. Call Chris on 01273 384291

Advertisements

How fast is your broadband?

Broadband Speed

Test your speed now

Click for
mobile broadband deals from Mobile Broadband Genie


Compare Broadband

Alternatively take a look at mobile broadband packages.