| Beyond journalism: Theorizing the transformation of journalism |
43 |
| Journalism beyond democracy: A new look into journalistic roles in political and everyday life |
37 |
| Readers' perception of computer-generated news: Credibility, expertise, and readability |
25 |
| What clicks actually mean: Exploring digital news user practices |
16 |
| 'Checking' and googling: Stages of news consumption among young adults |
15 |
| Social media as public opinion: How journalists use social media to represent public opinion |
15 |
| Comments, analytics, and social media: The impact of audience feedback on journalists' market orientation |
13 |
| A new sensation? An international exploration of sensationalism and social media recommendations in online news publications |
13 |
| Management and resistance in the digital newsroom |
12 |
| Decline in news content engagement or news medium engagement? A longitudinal analysis of news engagement since the rise of social and mobile media 2009-2012 |
12 |
| Can foundations solve the journalism crisis? |
11 |
| Dealing with the mess (we made): Unraveling hybridity, normativity, and complexity in journalism studies |
11 |
| Breaking news production processes in US metropolitan newspapers: Immediacy and journalistic authority |
11 |
| Is audience engagement worth the buzz? The value of audience engagement, comment reading, and content for online news brands |
9 |
| The 'Nate Silver effect' on political journalism: Gatecrashers, gatekeepers, and changing newsroom practices around coverage of public opinion polls |
9 |
| A practice approach to the study of news production |
9 |
| News, entertainment, or both? Exploring audience perceptions of media genre in a hybrid media environment |
8 |
| When politicians go native: The consequences of political native advertising for citizens' trust in news |
8 |
| Journalists at a crossroads: Are traditional norms and practices challenged by Twitter? |
8 |
| Journalists are humans, too: A phenomenology of covering the strongest storm on earth |
8 |
| Lack of trust in the news media, institutional weakness, and relational journalism as a potential way forward |
7 |
| Are newspapers' news stories becoming more alike? Media content diversity in Belgium, 1983-2013 |
7 |
| Issue and game frames in the news: Frame-building factors in television coverage of the 2014 Scottish independence referendum |
7 |
| Epilogue: Timing the study of news temporality |
7 |
| What to do about social media? Politics, populism and journalism |
7 |
| Journalism studies still needs to fix Western bias |
7 |
| Five ways BuzzFeed is preserving (or transforming) the journalistic field |
7 |
| Journalistic transformation: How source texts are turned into news stories |
7 |
| When White reporters cover race: News media, objectivity and community (dis)trust |
6 |
| Mapping digital journalism: Comparing 48 news websites from six countries |
6 |
| Temporal affordances in the news |
6 |
| Covering the hermit regime: A comparison of North Korea coverage at the Associated Press and NK News |
6 |
| Journalist social media practice in China: A review and synthesis |
6 |
| Protecting democracy or conspiring against it? Media and politics in Latin America: A glimpse from Brazil |
6 |
| 'Fool me once, shame on you': Direct personal experience and media trust |
6 |
| The intermediate time of news consumption |
6 |
| The GamerGate controversy and journalistic paradigm maintenance |
6 |
| On the use of the term translation' in journalism studies |
6 |
| Constructive journalism: Proponents, precedents, and principles |
6 |
| Online news creation, trust in the media, and political participation: Direct and moderating effects over time |
6 |
| The biggest challenge facing journalism: A lack of trust |
6 |
| Journalism as a public good: A Scandinavian perspective |
6 |
| The public doesn't miss the public. Views from the people: Why news by the people? |
5 |
| Fake news and 'RussiaGate' discourses: Propaganda in the post-truth era |
5 |
| Media capture with Chinese characteristics: Changing patterns in Hong Kong's news media system |
5 |
| Temporal reflexivity in journalism studies: Making sense of change in a more timely fashion |
5 |
| Post-industrial fog: Reconsidering innovation in visions of journalism's future |
5 |
| Financial journalism in today's high-frequency news and information era |
5 |
| Framing the Cypriot economic crisis: In the service of the neoliberal vision |
5 |
| Professional role enactment amid information warfare: War correspondents tweeting on the Ukraine conflict |
5 |