Full Description
Drawing on expert contributions from around the UK, this collection brings together a series of insights into the contemporary local and community news media landscape in the UK.
Offering an analysis of the ongoing 'crisis' in the provision of local news, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the book provides a critical space for practitioners and scholars to reflect on emerging models for economically sustainable, participatory local news services. It showcases new scholarly analyses of local news provision and community news practices, giving voice to the experiences of practitioners from across the local news ecology. In a set of diverse contributing chapters, campaigners and practitioners map out the period of recent rapid change for local news, questioning contemporary government initiatives and highlighting the advent of diverse, entrepreneurial reactions to the spaces created by a decline in local mainstream news services. This book is a timely examination of what we can learn from the variety of approaches being taken across the local media landscape in the commercial, subsidised and non-profit sector, shining new light on how practices that place the engagement of citizens at their centre might be propagated within this policy and funding landscape.
Reappraising Local and Community News in the UK is a valuable resource for students and scholars interested in local news and journalism, as well as for anyone interested in the evolving local media landscape in the UK.
Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction: local public service journalism and the BBC
David Harte
Local news deserts.
Agnes Gulyas
All in, all together? Government subsidy for news.
Jonathan Heawood
British community journalism's response to the COVID 19 pandemic.
Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Iñaki Garcia-Blanco and Julia Boelle
Supporting hyperlocal reporting: global funding, local voices.
Sarah Cheverton
Who's cashing in? Reappraising the economic value of independent community news.
Clare Cook and Coral Milburn-Curtis
Community Radio as Citizen Journalism.
Aleksandar Kocic, Josephine Coleman, Jerry Padfield, Jelena Milicev
Local data journalism practice in the UK
Jingrong Tong
Considering slow local news.
Mark Dunford