Dhiman Chattopadhyay

This book is a pan-India study that examines social
media’s impact on Indian journalism, highlights emerging challenges, and
discusses the way forward for India’s newsrooms. A result of three years of
field work, the project uses mixed-methods research – a survey of nearly 300
journalists from 15 Indian cities, followed by in-depth interviews with 25
senior editors – to analyze and explain journalists’ perceptions about social
media’s usefulness and credibility, factors that influence their online news
sourcing and sharing decisions, resultant challenges for newsrooms, and ways to
address those challenges. The findings offer unique insights into how newer
forces are influencing journalistic
practices in an online-first era.
Key differences emerge in perceptions between Indian journalists and
their Western compatriots about who or what influence their actions. The
findings also raise questions about Gatekeeping
as a term to describe journalistic work in 21st Century India's
newsrooms. The findings and the conclusions will hopefully help journalists,
educators, and anyone interested in Indian journalism gain a deeper, more
meaningful understanding about social media’s impact on Indian journalism, and
the way ahead for India’s newsrooms.
1. Introduction
2. Journalism in an Online-First Era
3. Gates and Influences: Theoretical
Framework
4. Building Blocks: Framework and
Methodology
5. Perceptions and Influences: Findings
from the Survey
6. Social Media’s Impact on Indian
Journalism: Editors Speak
7. Emerging Challenges and the Way Ahead
8. Implications
Dhiman Chattopadhyay is an assistant professor
in the Department of Communication, Journalism and Media, at Shippensburg
University, USA.
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