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A Question of PowerConflict, agreement and negotiation between journalists and their sources.Conference, September 29-30, 2011Account of the conference (in Dutch)Klaske Tameling wrote about the conference on the journalism weblog De Nieuwe Reporter. A link to the article: http://www.denieuwereporter.nl/2011/10/daar-zouden-we-het-niet-over-hebben-de-machtige-strijd-tussen-de-journalist-en-zijn-bronnen/ (Dutch) Thank You!We would like to thank the keynotes, participants and spectators who helped making A Question of Power a succesful and thoroughly enjoyable experience. Special thanks go to Stichting Democratie en Media (SDM), Instituut voor Cultuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek Groningen (ICOG) and Onderzoekschool Geesteswetenschappen Groningen (OGWG) for their generous financial support. The active organizational support of Marijke Wubbolts was invaluable.
Marcel Broersma Birte Schohaus Bas den Herder
A Question of PowerIn the two-day conference ‘A Question of Power’, the changing dynamics between journalists and their sources will be addressed. Conventional wisdom is that reporters want to obtain newsworthy or even spectacular information while their sources aim for a profitable image. However, among media researchers, be they from a political communications or journalism studies perspective, there is consensus that this relation has changed dramatically. Broadly discussed under the idea of ‘mediatization’, it is thought that media logic increasingly determines the language in which public communication takes place. On the other hand, the proliferation of social media allows sources to bypass journalists to speak to audiences directly. Yet, the effect of these changes on the journalist-source relationship is not clear-cut and the question of how they affect the power relations between reporters and their sources has so far remained largely neglected. Is the development towards a ‘mediatized’ public sphere detrimental to meaningful political debate? And what does it mean for the journalist’s autonomy? This conference seeks to investigate how the journalist-source relationship as we know it has transformed and still is transforming.
Conference DatesSeptember 29-30, 2011. Additional informationIn this conference, keynote adresses will be combined with expert workshops and discussion, the overall aim being a fruitful scholarly debate. The conference will start on Thursday morning and will run until Friday afternoon (around 3 p.m.). Accommodation will be provided for all accepted paper contributors. Workshop co-ordinators
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| Last modified: | November 28, 2011 13:49 |
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Graduate School for the Humanities |
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