Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative

This article examines the Local Journalism Initiative (LJI), initially a $70-million, five-year program of the Canadian government to fund new reporting positions in existing newsrooms across Canada, with the goal of increasing the amount of civic journalism. Using a mixed methods approach, we analy...

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Main Authors: Magda Konieczna, Béatrice Girardin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: J-Schools Canada / Écoles-J Canada 2024-05-01
Series:Facts & Frictions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://factsandfrictions.ca/portfolio-item/ffv3n2-missed-opportunities-lji/
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author Magda Konieczna
Béatrice Girardin
author_facet Magda Konieczna
Béatrice Girardin
author_sort Magda Konieczna
collection DOAJ
description This article examines the Local Journalism Initiative (LJI), initially a $70-million, five-year program of the Canadian government to fund new reporting positions in existing newsrooms across Canada, with the goal of increasing the amount of civic journalism. Using a mixed methods approach, we analyzed the language in almost 100 publicly available documents, conducted interviews with 11 participants and did a content analysis of 240 stories to examine how newsrooms defined the news desert they were trying to fill, whether work was civically focused and professionally produced, and what the LJI tells us about what kind of journalism the market can’t fund. In comparing the implementation of the program to an emerging set of best practices in journalism, we argue that the LJI represents a missed opportunity to help newsrooms evolve to better focus on the kind of information their communities need. We conclude with the one outlier in our sample, a community-access television station, that does make efforts to engage its community.
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publisher J-Schools Canada / Écoles-J Canada
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spelling doaj-art-700546c7f084437c9e0086dcd6da318c2024-11-27T03:13:10ZengJ-Schools Canada / Écoles-J CanadaFacts & Frictions2816-23662024-05-0132821http://doi.org/10.22215/ff/v3.i2.04Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism InitiativeMagda Konieczna0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1597-8656Béatrice GirardinConcordia UniversityThis article examines the Local Journalism Initiative (LJI), initially a $70-million, five-year program of the Canadian government to fund new reporting positions in existing newsrooms across Canada, with the goal of increasing the amount of civic journalism. Using a mixed methods approach, we analyzed the language in almost 100 publicly available documents, conducted interviews with 11 participants and did a content analysis of 240 stories to examine how newsrooms defined the news desert they were trying to fill, whether work was civically focused and professionally produced, and what the LJI tells us about what kind of journalism the market can’t fund. In comparing the implementation of the program to an emerging set of best practices in journalism, we argue that the LJI represents a missed opportunity to help newsrooms evolve to better focus on the kind of information their communities need. We conclude with the one outlier in our sample, a community-access television station, that does make efforts to engage its community. https://factsandfrictions.ca/portfolio-item/ffv3n2-missed-opportunities-lji/local newsqualitative methodscase studieslocal journalism initiativepolitical economy of news
spellingShingle Magda Konieczna
Béatrice Girardin
Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative
Facts & Frictions
local news
qualitative methods
case studies
local journalism initiative
political economy of news
title Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative
title_full Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative
title_fullStr Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative
title_full_unstemmed Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative
title_short Missed opportunities for community engagement: An examination of the government-funded Local Journalism Initiative
title_sort missed opportunities for community engagement an examination of the government funded local journalism initiative
topic local news
qualitative methods
case studies
local journalism initiative
political economy of news
url https://factsandfrictions.ca/portfolio-item/ffv3n2-missed-opportunities-lji/
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AT beatricegirardin missedopportunitiesforcommunityengagementanexaminationofthegovernmentfundedlocaljournalisminitiative