Emerging Best Practices
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"The essays in this collection cover best practices in an era of networked, global journalism; the role of transparency in relation to other journalistic values; verification practices for social media; principles of linking; curation and aggregation; live blogging and tweeting; corrections and "unpublishing"; citizen collaboration; multimedia journalism; data journalism; and issues related to journalists' public and private selves. The essays are tightly integrated through attention to three key ethical frameworks: duty, virtue, and care. Case studies of best practices and questions for reflection offer opportunities for application. . Summing Up: Highly recommended." J. H. Fritz, Duquesne University, for CHOICE "The best of the emergent literature on online journalism combines the applied and the theoretical, allowing readers to see the connections between abstract and concrete principles. By grounding the book in best practices, and by turning to a veritable whos who of commentators to examine the state of the art across so many aspects of online journalism, the editors assemble a timely, useful book of interest to practitioners, teachers and students. Zion and Craig, seasoned journalists as well as academics, walk the walk, and hence can talk the talk." Charles N. Davis, Dean, Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Georgia "The essays in this collection cover best practices in an era of networked, global journalism; the role of transparency in relation to other journalistic values; verification practices for social media; principles of linking; curation and aggregation; live blogging and tweeting; corrections and "unpublishing"; citizen collaboration; multimedia journalism; data journalism; and issues related to journalists' public and private selves. The essays are tightly integrated through attention to three key ethical frameworks: duty, virtue, and care. Case studies of best practices and questions for reflection offer opportunities for application... Summing Up: Highly recommended." J. H. Fritz, Duquesne University, USA, in CHOICE "The best of the emergent literature on online journalism combines the applied and the theoretical, allowing readers to see the connections between abstract and concrete principles. By grounding the book in best practices, and by turning to a veritable whos who of commentators to examine the state of the art across so many aspects of online journalism, the editors assemble a timely, useful book of interest to practitioners, teachers and students. Zion and Craig, seasoned journalists as well as academics, walk the walk, and hence can talk the talk." Charles N. Davis, Dean, Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Georgia, USA
Lawrie Zion is an Associate Professor of Journalism at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, and editor-in-chief of upstart magazine. He has worked as a broadcaster with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and as a film journalist for a range of print publications. He wrote and researched the 2007 documentary The Sounds of Aus, which tells the story of the Australian accent. David Craig is a Professor of Journalism and Associate Dean at the University of Oklahoma in the United States. He is the author of Excellence in Online Journalism: Exploring Current Practices in an Evolving Environment and The Ethics of the Story: Using Narrative Techniques Responsibly in Journalism.
1. Why Best Practices? Lawrie Zion 2. Journalism Ethics and Best Practices David Craig 3. Best Practices in the Network Journalism Sphere Ansgard Heinrich 4. The Magical Concept of Transparency Stephen J. A. Ward 5. Filtering Fact from Fiction: A Verification Framework for Social Media Alfred Hermida 6. Best Practices for Linking Juliette De Maeyer 7. The Case for Curatorial Journalism ... or, Can You Really Be an Ethical Aggregator? Fiona Martin 8. Real-time Online Reporting: Best Practices for Live Blogging Neil Thurman 9. Live-Tweeting: The Rise of Real-time Reporting Jonathan Hewett 10. Handling Mistakes: Corrections and Unpublishing Tim Currie 11. Collaboration Lily Canter 12. Fostering and Moderating Citizen Conversations David Domingo 13. "These Views Are My Own": The Private and Public Self in the Digital Media Sphere Kelly Fincham 14. Multimedia Journalism Mindy McAdams 15. Data Journalism Paul Bradshaw