6533b85dfe1ef96bd12be73c
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Sourcing practices in online journalism : an ethnographic study of the formation of trust in and the use of journalistic sources
Ville Manninensubject
media_common.quotation_subjectlähdekritiikki050801 communication & media studiesEducationtrust discoursesnews sources0508 media and communicationsEthnographySelection (linguistics)Quality (business)Sociologyta518source credibilitymedia_commonverkkojournalismiOnline journalismbusiness.industryCommunicationSource credibility05 social sciencestrustPublic relationssourcing practicelähdeaineistotluottamusjournalismionline journalismIdeology0509 other social sciences050904 information & library sciencesbusinessluotettavuusdescription
Arguably one of the most important factors of journalistic quality is careful source selection. Studies on online journalism have revealed working conditions which may lead to poor sourcing practices. This article seeks to answer the following questions: What sources do online journalists use, and how do they rationalize their sourcing practices? A total of 17 Finnish online journalists in 7 newsrooms were observed and interviewed over their practices of source searching, evaluation, and use. The study revealed five distinctive rationales of source use, which I call trust discourses: the ideological, the pragmatic, the cynically pragmatic, the consensual, and the contextual trust. Different trust discourses are associated with different source types, influences, and forms and degrees of source critique. The results reveal – among other things – the online journalists’ largely unquestioned trust of official sources and the cynical re-purposing of content from other media. The study provides accurate first hand observations on the sourcing practices and the results thereof of online journalists, and provides a viable framework for the further study of sourcing practices in online journalism. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-09-02 |