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What's stopping them? : towards a grounded theory of online journalism

Steensen, Steen
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Postprint version of article originally published in journalism studies. u r l: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700902975087
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URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10642/369
Date
2009-12
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  • SAM - Institutt for journalistikk og mediefag [360]
Original version
Steensen, S. (2009). What's stopping them? : towards a grounded theory of online journalism. Journalism Studies. 10 (6), 821-836   http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700902975087
Abstract
Findings in recent research suggest that online journalism is much less innovative

than many researchers and scholars predicted a decade ago. Research into online

journalism has, however, been biased towards a focus on online news journalism,

thereby neglecting the magnitude of new styles and genres that are currently

emerging in online journalism. In this paper the findings of a longitudinal

ethnographic case study of the development of a section for feature journalism in the

Norwegian online newspaper dagbladet.no is presented. The study is framed by an

understanding of innovation as a process where organizational structures and

individual action interact. The findings suggest that individual action has been

downplayed as a determinant for processes of innovation in online newsrooms in

previous research, and that a substantive grounded theory of innovation in online

newspaper is made up of five factors: newsroom autonomy, newsroom work culture,

the role of management, the relevance of new technology and innovative individuals.
Publisher
Routledge
Series
Journalism Studies;10 (6)

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