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Will the Last Reporter Please Turn Out the Lights: The Collapse of Journalism and What Can Be Done to Fix It

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The article was published on 2011-05-01 and is currently open access. It has received 180 citations till now.

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THE TENSION BETWEEN PROFESSIONAL CONTROL AND OPEN PARTICIPATION: Journalism and its boundaries

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the academic literature explores that larger tension transforming the creative industries by extrapolating from the case of journalism, namely, the ongoing tension between professional control and open participation in the news process.
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Making sense of the newspaper crisis: A critical assessment of existing research and an agenda for future work

TL;DR: An agenda for future work is outlined that fosters an analysis of the process, history, comparative development, and manifold implications of this crisis, and advances various empirical strategies to examine some of its most under-theorized dimensions.
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News Startups as Agents of Innovation: For-profit digital news startup manifestos as metajournalistic discourse

TL;DR: The authors examines 10 startups by focusing on the manifestos these new organizations offer when they introduce themselves to the public, which are an example of metajournalistic discourse, or interpretive discourse about journalism, that publicly define how journalism is changing or is not.
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Work and Identity in an Era of Precarious Employment: How Workers Respond to “Personal Branding” Discourse:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the importance of the ideological constructs that workers are led to embrapade themselves in order to find precarious work, and the significance of these constructs.
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At Work in the Digital Newsroom

TL;DR: The working conditions and experiences of journalists in digital-first newsrooms and those whose work primarily involves engagement with so-called "social media" have been studied in this paper, however, labor remains sidelined in journalism studies.