Under-the-radar engagement: how and why news users limit their public expression by Ori Tenenboim
Drawing on privacy calculus theory and literature about engagement, avoidance, and relationship management, this study examines—through 50 in-depth interviews in Canada—how and why news users limit their news engagement visibility.
Divergent paths for journalism’s future with AI by Alfred Hermida
The theories of AI as a substituting force or complementary force in the labor market provide a way to chart the choices ahead.
Gut Feelings: Black Feminist Reverberations of Intuitive Theory by Alexis McGee
Dr. McGee examines Black feminist meaning-making processes informed by “gut feelings.” Since intuition is often represented, but rarely explained, she locates Black women’s “gut feelings” in the body as a way of theorizing emotions like in/security.
Accessible Care: The Human Rights Case for Take-Home Injectable Opioid Agonist Treatment by Kaitlyn Jaffe, Jennifer Gagnon, et. al.
This is the first study to address the intersection of iOAT delivery and disability experiences, especially through the lenses of disability rights and human rights.
The questions facing journalism in these turbulent times by Alfred Hermida and Mary Lynn Young
Presents the outcomes of discussion and debate from the ICA Post-conference News Industries: Funding Innovations and Futures, 24–25 June 2024, Gold Coast, Australia.
People, Power, Platforms and the Business of Journalism by Mary Lynn Young and Alfred Hermida
This introduction to a special issue marks a growing complexity and complicatedness in research on the business of digital journalism.
Why Infrastructure Studies for Journalism? by Mary Lynn young and Alfred Hermida
This article makes a case for the value of infrastructure studies in analyzing journalism’s evolving landscape.