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journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-07, 22:49authored byLawrie ZionLawrie Zion, T Marjoribanks, P O’Donnell
Zion, L., Marjoribanks, T., & O’Donnell, P. (2022). Who is a journalist now? Recognising atypical journalism work in the digital media economy. Media International Australia, 0(0). [citation to be updated once fully published] https://doi.org/10.1177/1329878X221134207
Abstract: For the past two decades, understandings of the scale of digital disruption in journalism work in post-industrialised countries have relied on data about newspaper closures, newsroom job losses and the creation of new full-time jobs in journalism. Yet, the digital economy has fostered new employment and work arrangements, and there is less secure employment in journalism, making it more difficult to define who is a journalist now. Using a case study of Australian journalists seeking re-employment after newsroom job loss, this article examines some of the emerging patterns of atypical journalism work. It concludes that attempts to measure the current extent of journalism work need to explicitly account for hybrid careers characterised by professional activities at the margins of or outside of traditional newsroom work. In the digital economy, journalists may undertake a range of journalism and non-journalism work simultaneously or sequentially.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: We acknowledge the support of the Australian Research Council Linkage Project grant, LP140100341, and our Linkage Project partners, the Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and the National Library of Australia. We also acknowledge the support of the Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant DP150102675.