Skip to main content

References and selected publications

References and selected publications

The authors welcome feedback on this report and suggestions on how to improve our work via reuters.institute@politics.ox.ac.uk as well as potential partnerships and support for our ongoing work.

References

Boczkowski, P. J., Mitchelstein, E., Matassi, M. 2018. ‘“News Comes Across When I’m in a Moment of Leisure”: Understanding the Practices of Incidental News Consumption on Social Media’, New Media and Society 20(10), 3523–39.

Boykoff, M. T., Boykoff, J. M. 2004. ‘Balance as Bias: Global Warming and the US Prestige Press’, Global Environmental Change 14(2), 125–36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2003.10.001

Cherubini, F., Newman, N., Nielsen, R. K. 2020. Changing Newsrooms 2020: Addressing Diversity and Nurturing Talent at a Time of Unprecedented Change. Oxford: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.

Hiles, S. S., Hinnant, A. 2014. ‘Climate Change in the Newsroom: Journalists’ Evolving Standards of Objectivity When Covering Global Warming’, Science Communication 36(4), 428–53. https://doi.org/10.1177/1075547014534077

Hoffman, L. H., Eveland, W. P. 2010. ‘Assessing Causality in the Relationship between Community Attachment and Local News Media Use’, Mass Communication and Society 13(2), 174–95. https://doi.org/10.1080/15205430903012144

Kreiss, D. 2019.‚ ‘The Social Identity of Journalists’, Journalism 20(1), 27–31. https://doi.org/10.1177/1464884918807595

McLeod, J. M., Daily, K., Zhongshi, G., Eveland, W. P., Jan, B., Seungchan, Y., Hsu, W. 1996. ‘Community Integration, Local Media Use, and Democratic Processes’, Communication Research 23(2), 179–209. https://doi.org/10.1177/009365096023002002

Marchi, R. 2012. ‘With Facebook, Blogs, and Fake News, Teens Reject Journalistic “Objectivity”’, Journal of Communication Inquiry 36(3), 246–62. https://doi.org/10.1177/0196859912458700

Newman, N., Gallo, N. 2020. Daily News Podcasts: Building New Habits in the Shadow of Coronavirus. Oxford: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.

Thurman, N., Cornia, A., Kunert, J. 2016. Journalists in the UK. Oxford:Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.

Vallone, R. P., Ross, L., Lepper, M. R. 1985. ‘The Hostile Media Phenomenon: Biased Perception and Perceptions of Media Bias in Coverage of the Beirut Massacre’, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 49(3), 577–585. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.49.3.577

Zunino, E., Arcangeletti Yacante, C. A. 2020. ‘Media Coverage of COVID-19 in Argentina: A Study about the Agendas of the Pandemic in the Main National Digital Media’, Prácticas de Oficio 25(1), 49–66. https://ri.conicet.gov.ar/handle/11336/121490

Recent Reuters Institute publications

An Ongoing Infodemic: How People in Eight Countries Access and Rate News and Information about Coronavirus a Year into the Pandemic
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Anne Schulz, and Richard Fletcher

Listening to What Trust in News Means to Users: Qualitative Evidence from Four Countries
Benjamin Toff, Sumitra Badrinathan, Camila Mont’Alverne, Amy Ross Arguedas, Richard Fletcher, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Women and Leadership in the News Media 2021: Evidence from Twelve Markets
Craig T. Robertson, Meera Selva, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Race and Leadership in the News Media 2021: Evidence from Five Markets
Craig T. Robertson, Meera Selva, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Journalism, Media, and Technology Trends and Predictions 2021
Nic Newman

What We Think We Know and What We Want to Know: Perspectives on Trust in News in a Changing World
Benjamin Toff, Sumitra Badrinathan, Camila Mont’Alverne, Amy Ross Arguedas, Richard Fletcher, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Women and News: An Overview of Audience Behaviour in Eleven Countries
Meera Selva and Simge Andı

Hearts and Minds: Harnessing Leadership, Culture, and Talent to Really Go Digital
Lucy Kueng

Daily News Podcasts: Building New Habits in the Shadow of Coronavirus
Nic Newman and Nathan Gallo

Communications in the Coronavirus Crisis: Lessons for the Second Wave
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Richard Fletcher, Antonis Kalogeropoulos, and Felix M. Simon

Changing Newsrooms 2020: Addressing Diversity and Nurturing Talent at a Time of Unprecedented Change
Federica Cherubini, Nic Newman, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Few Winners, Many Losers: The COVID-19 Pandemic’s Dramatic and Unequal Impact on Independent News Media
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Federica Cherubini, and Simge Andı

Publish Less, but Publish Better: Pivoting to Paid in Local News
Joy Jenkins

Information Inequality in the UK Coronavirus Communications Crisis
Richard Fletcher, Antonis Kalogeropoulos, Felix M. Simon, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

Social Media Communities and Reporting of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Mark Frankel

Volume and Patterns of Toxicity in Social Media Conversations during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Sílvia Majó-Vázquez, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Joan Verdú, Nandan Rao, Manlio de Domenico, and Omiros Papaspiliopoulos

The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism is dedicated to exploring the future of journalism worldwide through debate, engagement, and research. It is part of the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford, and affiliated with Green Templeton College. Core funding comes from the Thomson Reuters Foundation with additional support from a wide range of other funders including academic funding bodies, foundations, non-profits, and industry partners.