Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för journalistik, medier och kommunikation
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://gupea-staging.ub.gu.se/handle/2077/9825
Browse
Recent Submissions
Item Digital news as social production of knowledge(s)(2025-08-25) Ramsälv, AmandaThis thesis investigates how journalists decide what is true and important enough to publish as news. News is approached as a particular form of public knowledge claiming to accurately provide audiences with what is relevant to think about in everyday life. The central theoretical arguments are twofold: 1) Journalists socially decide what they claim to be true and important as the institutionalized rules, routines, and standards for news production shape the specific form of knowledge produced, and 2) Journalism´s authority is not set in stone but is contingent upon the relationship between journalism and its audiences. A relationship built upon audiences´ need for journalism, journalism´s discursive dimensions, as well as the control journalism possesses to provide knowledge for stratified audiences. The digital developments within news production accentuate the malleable character of journalism in shaping radically different genres of news. The four empirical studies investigate the everyday production processes of two developing news genres that display opposing trends within modern digital news cultures: breaking news and an independent form of data journalism. The thesis applies an ethnographic approach, in addition to a mixed-methods case study, to investigate how the journalists acquire, claim and justify such news as forms of knowledges. The results in the four studies demonstrate crucial implications of the knowledge-producing practices for journalistic authority to provide true and important knowledge.Item A talking matter: Discursive enactments of norms and tensions in a public participation process(2024-10-01) Sjögren, MariaThis thesis is about public participation as a social practice and its discursive construction. Generally, previous research has depicted public participation as a tensional practice that is both praised and criticized. Participatory events such as public meetings are tensional in their own right as they have ideals of dialogic and open-ended communication, while they often seek to accomplish certain institutional outcomes. Further, as these events are novel and often occur as single occasions, the norms for participating in them remain unclear. Departing from these puzzling points, the thesis aims to gain a deeper understanding of public participation as a practice by analysing how norms and tensions de facto are enacted in everyday interactions. The material consists of a two-year-long ethnographic study in which I have followed civil servants initiating a participatory process aimed at reducing violence that affects children in a suburb of a metropolitan area of Sweden. In three central communicative events of this process (planning meetings, interviews with citizen-parents and public meetings), I have analysed how the discursive actions of the civil servants bring the practice into being. Taken together, the studies suggest a multifaceted role of the civil servants as they work to balance contrasting ideals both within the municipal organization and within the communicative events. The studies also highlight that a protruding tension in these interactions is related to a task- and goal-oriented focus in the civil servants’ actions. The discursive patterns depicted can serve as reflection for practitioners as well as for future studies. However, the thesis ends with a reflection about discourse practices of longing. Without disregarding the tensions outlined, a perspective of longing also encompasses the flourishing praise of participatory processes, which are present in this study as well as in the empirical and theoretical literature.Item Ett självmatande maskineri. En etnografisk studie av kommunikationsverksamheten i en svensk myndighet.(2024-05-14) Stenkvist, Sara RebeckaI denna avhandling undersöks kommunikation som ett samtida fenomen i offentlig förvaltning. Studien har en etnografisk ansats och det empiriska materialet har samlats in genom observationer av kommunikationsverksamheten i och kring en framväxande svensk förvaltningsmyndighet under 2017- 2018. Med teoretisk utgångspunkt i den skandinaviska grenen inom organisatorisk institutionalism studeras kommunikation som idéer vars mening förhandlas i förhållande till olika element: diskurser, relationer, rutiner och artefakter. För att abstrakta idéer om kommunikation ska kunna användas i det vardagliga arbetet måste de översättas och anpassas efter kontextens särskilda villkor och förutsättningar och utifrån de aktörer – mänskliga såväl som icke-mänskliga – som är aktiva i översättningsprocessen. Idéer, organisationer, teknik och individer är inbäddade i och uttryck för ideologiska system, och i den här avhandlingen kopplas idéer om kommunikation samman med och förstås mot bakgrund av neoliberalism och kommunikativ kapitalism. Avhandlingen visar hur fyra olika översättningar, som belyser olika aspekter, syften, motiv och funktioner med kommunikation, manifesteras genom elementen. Det innebär att kommunikation i det dagliga arbetet omfattar aspekter som representation, form och yta; information, kunskapsspridning; påverkan; och interagerande, samverkan, dialog, och gemenskap. Studien avslöjar inneboende konflikter inom och mellan översättningarna, vilka hanteras främst genom att löskoppla diskurser från handlingar och artefakter. Vidare visar studien att endast de informativa och interagerande översättningarna uppfattas som legitima svar på lagar och förpliktelser. Studien föreslår sex strukturella drivkrafter som svar på frågan varför kommunikation översätts som det gör. Myndigheten är enligt lag skyldig att kommunicera, men också pressad av samhällets – och kommunikatörsgruppens – normer och förväntningar kring transparens, användarvänlighet och lättillgänglighet. I dagens digitaliserade landskap förväntas myndigheter vara synliga och tillgängliga på olika digitala plattformar. NPM-orienterade förvaltningsreformer har lett till att myndigheter antagit rollen som autonom aktör som behöver ha företagsliknande unika identiteter. Den undersökta myndigheten verkar i en politiskt osäker miljö och kommunikation erbjuder en snabb lösning på myndighetens svaga legitimitet. Kommunikatörsgruppens vilja att omförhandla sin roll, från operativ till strategisk, pekas ut som ett motiv bakom insatser som skapar mer administration och arbete både för kärnverksamheten och kommunikatörerna. Avhandlingen bidrar till en problematiserande analys av kommunikationens roll i svenska förvaltningsmyndigheter.Item News Publishers’ Innovation of Practices Amid Platform Dominance(2023-08-30) Chua, SherwinTo news publishers, digital platform companies (or “platforms”) such as Google and Meta present both benefits and risks. Platforms offer publishers certain functionalities and services that may be beneficial, but they have also gained an immense influence over journalism and the business of news, so much so that publishers have become cautious of being over-reliant on them. Given this complex dynamic between publishers and platforms, it is critically important to understand how publishers continuously innovate their practices when engaging with platforms. To shed light on this, this dissertation employs a practice oriented approach and a mix of qualitative methods to longitudinally examine how and why a Singaporean news publisher innovated its editorially oriented practices in relation to platforms. This dissertation covers a six-year period (2015 to 2021) and includes four studies, each focusing on different aspects of the publisher’s innovation of practices. This dissertation offers four key conclusions: (1) platform significance, which highlights the varying importance of platforms to publishers, the shifting platform landscape and the risks of platform dependency, (2) platform mutability, which foregrounds platforms as ever-changing technological infrastructures that exert authority over publishers and foster dependency, (3) publishers’ platform configuration, which provides a deeper understanding of publishers’ agency to strategically and continually configure a range of platform related practices while attempting to strike a balance between leveraging platform opportunities and maintaining editorial and financial autonomy from them, and (4) publishers’ platform-oriented competencies, which underline the growing importance of workers with platform-related knowledge, skills and expertise, and the impact they have on newsroom dynamics. Overall, this work offers insights into the evolving publisher-platform relationship and raises important questions regarding the sustainability of journalism in a platform-dominated digital media landscape.Item Voices in the arena: A Participation-Centred Study of Multivocal Risk and Crisis Communication(2023-06-12) Rodin, PavelContemporary risk and crisis communication take place in a complex multiplatform and multivocal environment, where numerous social media foster and facilitate online participation. Lay social media users are thus able to create, maintain, and share their own crisis narrative(s), which exist alongside official information and media reports. Traditional theoretical and practical approaches to risk and crisis communication focus primarily on strategic communication by organisations and institutional actors, and thus fail to account for lay people’s participation. In contrast, this dissertation draws on the Rhetorical Arena Theory and aims to explore the multivocality of risk and crisis communication from the perspective of lay social media users’ participation. Voices in the arena offers three studies conducted in the two risk and crisis communication contexts related to the public health: the 2014-2015 Ebola outbreak and vaccination communication in Sweden. The results of the dissertation deepen the understanding of multivocal risk and crisis communication and expand the Rhetorical Arena Theory by offering insights into (i) the variations and interplay of communicative contributions on rhetorical sub-arenas by the news media and social media users, (ii) motivations for online participation as well as the ways sociality and visibility of communication on Facebook affect these motivations, and (iii) the effects of trust beliefs on motivations for online participation and corresponding participation roles.Item Us Versus Them and the Role of the Media. The Influence of Media on Attitudes Toward Migration in Europe(2021-11-02) Theorin, NoraDuring the last decade, migration has become one of the most salient and politicized issues in Europe, and even more so during and after the sharp rise in immigration in 2015. This issue appears to have consolidated a central position in political debates and on media agendas across European countries. At the same time, there are sharp differences within as well as between European countries, in attitudes toward migration and perceptions of migration. This makes it important to understand how people’s attitudes toward migration are shaped. In this context, the media – a key source of political information – is likely to play a crucial role. The aim of this dissertation is therefore to investigate when and how the media influence public attitudes toward migration, and perceptions of migration across European countries. Toward this end, the dissertation combines media effect theories and intergroup relationship theories, and relies on panel data as well as a survey experiment conducted in seven European countries. The main findings of the dissertation are: (a) The effects of media use on attitudes and perceptions depend on where the migration is coming from, (b) The effects vary between media types, and alternative media appear to have more substantial effects on attitudes toward immigration than traditional media, (c) The relationships between media use and attitudes is likely to be reciprocal, (d) Emotions and perceptions can function as mediators that explain framing effects on attitudes toward immigration, but emotions appear to be a more important mediator than perceptions, and (e) Media do not always move public opinion on migration, and the effects are country-specific rather than universal.Item Under the influence? Understanding media’s coverage of opinion polls and their effects on citizens and politicians(2021-01-14) Oleskog Tryggvason, PerNews media’s use of horse race polls is a defining feature of contemporary political reporting. This thesis investigates how the news media use these opinion polls and how this coverage can influence two of the most central actors in representative democracies: citizens and politicians. This is addressed in four studies, utilizing different kinds of news content data, a representative panel survey of Swedish voters, and a large-scale survey of more than 2400 politicians. The main finding from the first study is that journalists frequently fail to adhere to statistical uncertainties when covering and explaining changes that have occurred in the polls. In more than half of the cases when journalists provide explanations for changes in the polls, the difference could be the result of sampling error. The second study examines the impact of poll coverage on subsequent political news coverage. The main finding is that there appears to be a spillover effect of how well a party is faring in public opinion and how it is portrayed in subsequent coverage. Among other things, findings suggest that parties receiving positive poll coverage are more likely to be portrayed favorably in subsequent coverage. The third study focuses on the prevalence of a bandwagon effect of poll results. Using panel data, it demonstrates how perceptions of recent developments in the polls can be an important factor in understanding how voters assess political parties and their vote intention. Voters perceiving a party to have increased its support in recent polls are more favorable towards, and more likely to say they will vote for, thus party. The fourth study focuses on how political elites view the influence of news media’s poll coverage. It finds that poll coverage is seen as an important factor that can have a considerable impact on enthusiasm among party members, the vote choice of the public, and the image of their party in the news media. Moreover, the perceived influence attributed to poll coverage is in part a function of experiences related to poll developments for the politicians’ own party. Taken together, the four studies serve as important pieces in understanding the role of news media’s poll coverage in democratic processes.Item Media Echo Chambers: Selective Exposure and Confirmation Bias in Media Use, and its Consequences for Political Polarization(2020-12-17) Dahlgren, Peter M.The new digital media landscape has created a high-choice media environment that has made it easier for people to find news and information that support their political beliefs and attitudes, and avoid news and information that challenge those beliefs or attitudes. How does this affect people’s selection of content and political polarization in the long run? This thesis investigates the relationship between different political preferences (political party, political interest and ideological leaning) and selective media use over time among the Swedish population, and whether this selectivity leads to political polarization (ideological polarization and affective polarization). The thesis uses longitudinal surveys with a cross-section and panel design, and also a survey experiment. The results suggest that selectivity has not increased to the point that people in general only select information that supports their beliefs or attitudes, nor that people in general necessarily avoid information that challenge those beliefs or attitudes. Political interest is also one key motivator for people to select news and information that challenge them politically. The metaphor of a media echo chamber, where the only voices people hear are more of the same, is therefore far from reality.Item Being political in the media – Political identities in journalistic and Twitter discourse(2019-08-30) Persson, GustavThis thesis is about the role of media discourse in shaping the political identities of those who want to be heard in public. The ways in which people are able to speak, know, and feel in political situations have important implications for how we conceive of the possibilities to be engaged in contemporary democracy. This thesis offer four empirical studies of how political identities are constructed through journalism and social networking services in cases in which people have decided to make their voices heard. Identities constructed through mediated participation have important implications for how we understand the possibilities to act politically in public, a public that that is characterized as having a multifarious media ecology. Methodologically as well as theoretically it is bound together by a discursive approach to political identities, which means that it is at the discursive level of mediation that identities are analysed as a means to open up for discussions about the limits and constraints of what it means to be political today, what kind and now the media facilitate political engagement. Empirically it analyses print and radio journalism as well as emotional tweets and Twitter profiles to map out ways in which political identities are constructed in activist participation in and through the media. The four different studies contribute to discussions around what it is to be knowledgeable, emotional, subjective and able when you are communicating politics in media discourse. One of the main contribution is that political identities in the media are precarious and that research need to be careful about making too simplistic assumptions about those who make their voices heard in public or what they need to become in undertaking this, and there is a necessary precarious quality to becoming or emerging political in the media, which poses important challenges for social scientific studies that wishes to understand what and who those who act politically through the media.Item #InFlux. Journalists’ adoption of social media and journalists’ social roles(2019-08-16) Hedman, Ulrika#InFlux investigates journalists’ adoption of social media and social network sites (SNS) from the theoretical perspective of journalistic roles. It shows how the social roles of journalists are situated along the axes of formal–personal and news media logic–social media logic: skeptical shunners and activists, lurkers and networkers, news hubs and celebrified marketers, coordinators and ambassadors, professional marketers and pragmatics, entrepreneurs and journalists in incognito mode. The emergence of a social news media logic has implications for journalistic ethics and possibly brings a de-professionalization of journalists. This thesis also shows that social media and SNS had an immediate impact among Swedish journalists and are now regarded as highly valued professional tools. Over time, the initial hype has faded – the general use can now best be described as pragmatic, while the high-end users use social media and SNS strategically for networking, audience dialogue, and personal branding. Journalists’ core professional ideals are not affected by the adoption of social media and SNS. The statistical methodological approach applied – a mixed design with surveys (cross-sectional and panel data) and content analysis of Twitter data – allows for a generalization of the findings to the national population of journalists in Sweden as well as for comparisons between groups of journalists, and shows a way of how to find a representative sample of journalists on Twitter and other SNS and how to make best use of the data collected.Item The private life of a nation in crisis: A study on the politics in / of Greek television fiction(2018-10-24) Aitaki, GeorgiaThe private life of a nation in crisis offers in-depth studies of the fictional reconstruction and negotiation of moments of heightened societal tension that take place throughout the life of a nation. Its constituent papers focus on the role of television fiction in representing and shaping either critical moments, events, or periods that disrupt the normal pace of life, or unresolved societal tensions that become part of everyday life. What is more, the papers investigate the socio-cultural consequences of representations, in terms of the interpretative lenses television fiction provides for understanding the events as such. The empirical focus is placed on television fiction produced and broadcast in Greece, a country that has recently received a large share of publicity because of its protagonistic role in the late 2000s Eurozone crisis and, at the same time, a media landscape with multiple aspects that still remain uncharted. The thesis contains case studies from different periods of Greek television fiction, from 1989 – the year of the launch of the first private channels in Greece – onwards, in an attempt to connect the overall project to the production context characterizing commercial television, another aspect of European television in the process of continuous exploration. Through a close analysis of specific television programmes, as well as a complementary study of the production culture of private television in Greece, this thesis aspires to contribute to the general question regarding the role of the media in critical, uncertain, or tumultuous times, with an emphasis on television fiction’s potential to recode their meaning and to reflect back on society.Item FASHIONABLE POLITICS The discursive construction of ethical consumerism in corporate communications, news media, and social media(2018-09-14) Arnesson, JohannaThis thesis investigates the discursive construction of ethical consumerism – a notion that encompasses both ‘conscious’ consumption choices and responsible’ corporate activities – in mediated discourses about fashion and clothing consumption in Sweden. Drawing on the discourse-historical approach within critical discourse analysis, the study provides an empirical examination of discursive elements in corporate communications, newspapers, and social media, which construct the market as the best solution to social injustice and climate change. The analysis focuses on how specific identities or practices are established as ethical, authentic, and legitimate, and investigates both the promises and the limits of discursive ethical consumerism in late capitalism. The thesis shows how corporate and journalistic discourses can be depoliticising, as they focus on consensus and collaboration rather than on conflicts of interest, and on individual responsibility and consumption choices rather than on political policy. However, the convergence of consumption and politics also becomes highly political when these issues are discussed by the audience. The approach places the thesis within a tradition of critical studies of branded politics and the neoliberalisation of contemporary societies, while still taking the reflexive awareness of politically motivated consumers into account.Item Battling the 'Invisible Nets'. Gender in the fields of journalism in sub-Saharan Africa(2017-05-04) Zuiderveld, MariaBattling the ‘invisible nets’ studies journalism as a gendered practice in sub-Saharan Africa. This thesis analyses the gender logic in the field of journalism by examining how structures of gender, class and race interact to create barriers and opportunities for black women journalists and media managers. The empirical focus is on South Africa but also includes Zambia, Nigeria, Ethiopia and Uganda. The theoretical framework is inspired by French socio- logist Pierre Bourdieu and the appropriation of his theories by Toril Moi. Inspired by an ethnographic approach, five empirical studies examine the lived experiences of black women journalists. The thesis also examines how gender logic operates in the field of journalism in South Africa on a detailed level by analysing reporting and editorial discussions concerning a specific gender-sensitive topic during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The results of the thesis show the South African context is unique in the way it shapes opportunities and obstacles for women in the field of journalism, and how black women journalists act in order to navigate the ‘invisible nets’ and succeed in the field.Item Bruised by the Invisible Hand. A critical examination of journalistic representations and the naturalization of neoliberal ideology in times of Industrial crisis.(2016-09-12) Jacobsson, DianaAbstract This dissertation revolves around questions that are central to the field of media and journalism research, questions about journalism and ideology, about journalistic agency and autonomy, and the room for maneuver and vulnerability of journalism today. The purpose of the study is to examine how neoliberal discourse operates in news media reporting of industrial crisis. Departing from critical theory and critical discourse analysis, the study suggests that how neoliberal discourse operates in the journalistic understanding of the relationship between state, labor and capital, becomes visible in the way that questions of rights and responsibilities connected to workers, politics and the business elite are shaped in a situation where mass unemployment is the expected outcome. The study therefore focuses on the negotiation and correspondence between the neoliberal and journalistic logic and comprises three empirical analyses of the journalistic representation of the working class, politics and business elite in the news coverage of the closing of a large Swedish factory in the early 2010s. The first substudy makes a historical comparison with news coverage during the textile industry crisis in the late 1970s and draws attention to how news journalism today dismantles the working class by the construction of discourses that prevent political and collective action. The second substudy identifies a firm neoliberal posture promoted by the right-wing government in conjunction with the first signs of crisis – and the disappearance of the question of political responsibility in the later news coverage concerning the closure of the factory. The third substudy illuminates how the clear labor perspective in the journalistic construction during the textile industry crisis in the 1970s is replaced by a dominant market perspective and a very lenient journalistic posture towards the economic elite in today’s news reporting. Taken together, the study suggests that the way the relation between state, labor and capital is understood and expressed in the representation of the working class, politics and the economic elite indicates a naturalization of the neoliberal ideology with few avenues for another understanding of rights and responsibilities in an industrial crisis. The study points to an ideological closure where alternative interpretations and representations seem to be beyond the reach or ability of mainstream journalism.Item What’s the Use of a Free Media? The Role of Media in Curbing Corruption and Promoting Quality of Government.(2013-11-15) Färdigh, Mathias A.Free media have traditionally been seen as vital to democratization and economic development. International actors, such as UN, the World Bank, the EU, Transparency International, the OECD and the research field in its entirety regard free media as one of the main means of curbing corruption. Numerous policy proposals and recommendations stress the importance of media freedom. Nevertheless, our knowledge of how effectively media actually perform to combat corruption is still limited – albeit growing. What’s the Use of a Free Media? presents three independent empirical studies that contribute to an understanding of this role, analyzing the media’s importance in curbing corruption and in promoting and generating high quality political institutions. The research design and robust empirical approach broaden the analytical scope of earlier studies and stressing the need to look beyond simple models of direct effects of media freedom. The dissertation problematizes and elaborates the specifications of both media freedom and quality of government, thereby helping to bridge the gap between theory and the equivalent empirical world.Item The Personalisation of Swedish Politics. Party Leaders in the Election Coverage 1979-2010.(2012-11-22) Bjerling, JohannesIn The Personalisation of Swedish Politics: Party Leaders in the Election Coverage 1979-2010, the question of whether Swedish news media focus increasingly on the party leaders is thoroughly examined. All in all, five formats are studied: Broadsheets (Dagens Nyheter, Svenska Dagbladet), tabloids (Aftonbladet, Expressen), public service television (SVT), public service radio (SR) and commercial television (TV4). Analytically, personalisation is conceived of as a concept with three dimensions: personification, orientation towards personae and intimisation. The multidimensionality of the concept is a most fundamental aspect to consider, not least since different dimensions can be related to different processes and developments: whereas personification, essentially, reflects a development of (increased) individualisation, orientation towards personae and intimisation are both related to a development in which personal characteristics are becoming increasingly important. On a theoretical level, a contribution of the study is that it relates the question of increased personalisation not only to changes within the news media system; also changes within the political system are considered. And here, three developments are central: increased interdependence, increased complexity and decreased party identification. Against this theoretical background, the author questions a view where (increased) personalisation is automatically condemned. Given that the political system has changed, the author argues that a prospective and party-centered model may have become somewhat obsolete; with citizens’ information needs in mind, information about the party leaders’ personal characteristics may well have become increasingly important. With regard to the empirical results, it is shown that claims of an increasingly party leader oriented coverage must be more nuanced than they usually are. Of the five formats that are examined, a general trend of personalisation can be found only for the tabloids. For all other formats, the overall evidence is really quite mixed.Item The Practice of Newspaper Ownership: Fifty Years of Control and Influence in the Swedish Local Press(2012-05-28) Ohlsson, JonasThis dissertation deals with a perennial theme in both public and academic debate: how ownership is exercised in the news media. It does so by exploring the main agency through which ownership control is expected to be exerted in the individual media firm: the board of directors. Establishing the board as an intermediary between owners and the executive and editorial management, the study addresses a number of questions pertaining to the role of media boards: who is elected to the boards; which decisions are made in the boardroom, and which are not; who influences them, and who does not. The empirical results come from a historical study of the Swedish newspaper industry. The Swedish press has long been characterized by close ties to the political arena. A more recent characteristic is the growing dominance of not-for-profit foundations as owners of newspapers. It is the consequence of this particular ownership form that is the main focus of the dissertation. The study analyzes the boards of three local, foundation-owned newspapers between 1955 and 2005. The newspapers are Barometern (Kalmar), Borås Tidning (Borås) and Sundsvalls Tidning (Sundsvall). The study builds primarily on two sources: minutes from over twelve-hundred board meetings and meetings of shareholders, and interviews with twenty-three former and current board members. The study shows that the governance processes, including both the role played by the individual board and the relative autonomy of the editorial department, have differed significantly between the three cases. The distinct characteristics have been reinforced not only by the fact that the newspapers are old and exceedingly mature institutions, but also as a result of a very slow circulation of members of the top echelons of the newspaper organizations. Consequently, the most noticeable shifts in the activities and power structures of the companies have followed from the entering of new decision-makers into the organizations. A basic conclusion is thus that there is no single answer concerning the ramifications of foundation ownership in the press. As a result of an increasingly competitive market situation, the companies have since the early 1990s nevertheless come to be increasingly dominated by professional managers and board members, making the traditional governance features less distinct. The process has been spurred by the fact that all three newspapers have been transformed from independents to parts of expanding newspaper groups. As a result, much of the allocative control previously enjoyed by the local boards has been transferred to central levels of the corporate hierarchy.Item Cross-media News Work - Sensemaking of the Mobile Media (R)evolution(2011-12-22) Westlund, OscarThis dissertation makes a longitudinal study of transforming tensions in media production processes. It focuses on the thoughts and actions of new and mobile media in the interplay between staff from editorial-, business and IT departments in an organization coupled with the old newspaper medium. It makes the story of change processes in a relatively typical large regional newspaper organization in the Western world (Göteborgs-Posten, Sweden). This case-study from Sweden, a country with high newspaper and ICT-diffusion, contributes to expand the geographic gaze of research into journalism, business and technology in a digital era. The aim of the dissertation is to study sensemaking of mobile media over time, which has been done through numerous in-depth interviews with a broad selection of media workers from 2008 to 2011. The sensemaking approach conceives interpretations and actions to take place in heterogeneous and circular patterns, and make possible for studying how media workers make sense by structuring and constructing unknown matters such as mobile media. Deriving from previous research on transforming news media organizations, the dissertation has considered four particular tensions in order to grasp important and contemporary contours of change. This involves investigating how tensions come into play between different actors, namely how media workers from the editorial, business and IT departments make sense of and negotiate their inherent boundaries. It also focuses how the tension between old and new comes into play, as these media workers of a newspaper organization (the old) make sense of mobile media (the new). Two particularly important tensions are being reshaped when it comes to their role as a news media producer. The first concerns producer vs. user, namely how their former relationship to users as linear is potentially being refashioned to accommodate for participation. The second concern humans vs. machines (technology), that is, how media producers relate to machines carrying out tasks previously performed by journalists. The study bear witness not only on how mobile media was shaped in a formative phase of development, but also how this work transformed how journalism, business and technology was approached and perceived. Newspaper journalism used to be tangled with print, but relatively disentangled from commercial and technological forces. Now, journalism is becoming decoupled from the upside of commercial contributions, and simultaneously is becoming increasingly blended with technology and commerce in its production, presentation and distribution. These transformations deserve further attention.Item Bilden av psykiatriområdet. Nyhetsrapporteringen i Rapport 1980-2006(2010-02-19T10:11:24Z) Magnusson, Ann-SofieIn Sweden, as in many other countries in the Western world, care and support to people with mental illness have undergone major organizational changes. The aim of the thesis is to describe and analyse the image of the psychiatric field that Swedish newscast gives from a long-term period of view and in the perspective of the great changes that have occurred in the psychiatric field. The research questions are: What image has the Swedish news coverage of the psychiatric field shown in a broad and long-term perspective? And how does the news image correspond to societal context? “The psychiatric field” encompasses both an individual as a societal perspective on mental illness. A model based on the idea of the psychiatric field as “reality” is used to study the news image. The model consists of psychiatric field actors and questions, their properties and relationships. The study of news content in the news program Rapport, “Sweden’s largest news media”, is used to answer the first research question. To answer the second research question, the news image is studied in relation to events in the psychiatric field and to government statistics. The psychiatric field becomes more newsworthy during the 27 years examined. It occurs more often; gets more space in the broadcasting and more impact as headlines. Four out of ten news items of the psychiatric field is about health care and legislation, while barely one third is related to violence and criminal activities. News about health care and legislation occupies more space, news about violence is more likely to be headlines. The changed news image corresponds to the actual circumstances, where comparisons have been possible to do. The thesis discusses possible explanations for why the news images looks like they do, partly on the basis of interviews with journalists. The results of the interviews show a professional dilemma where the journalists wants on the one hand to contribute to nuance depictions surrounding mental illness, on the other hand protect the fragile and inexperienced interviewers. Change in the news reporting about the psychiatric field over the period studied is probably caused by the interacting factors in society and journalism.Item Journalism in Transition. The professional Identity of Swedish Journalists(2010-02-12T12:13:18Z) Wiik, JennyIs journalism going through ‘de-professionalization’ or is it just entering a new phase – taking a different shape? And what is the meaning of professional ideals such as scrutiny and autonomy in these processes? In my thesis, “Journalism in Transition”, I discuss these matters, focusing on the case of Swedish journalists. Empirical support is drawn from a national survey conducted five times since 1989 on the Dept. of Journalism, Media and Communication at the University Gothenburg (JMG). Questions about journalists’ perceptions of various ideals offer excellent opportunities to explore possible homogenization vs. fragmentation, and what the attitudinal dimensions actually say about the professional content of Swedish journalism. The results are analyzed by the conceptualization of Bourdieu’s field theory, along with current professional theory, and point at a possible separation of professional levels where a few ideals constitute an over-arching professional identity, while the flora of attitudes below is more diverse and dependent on factors of organizational affiliation, gender and age. Professional ideals may furthermore be regarded as a form of symbolic capital, used as legitimizing tools in journalism’s struggle for maintaining status quo. A main conclusion is that journalism is not de-professionalizing on ideological level, but going through a re-formation. Traditional journalistic ideals have attained increasing support over time and the efforts to fix professional boundaries are fierce. These boundaries are, however, subjects of negotiation: In the professional identity formation of Swedish journalists between 1989-2005 I also detect and increasing orientation towards liberal- and market values, which I interpret as the incorporation of organizational values into the professional identity – thereby legitimizing those. A second conclusion is that social attributes such as gender, age and formal qualifications mean less to the professional identity formation in 2005 than they did in 1989. The reason for this is the increasing homogenization of journalistic ideals – all journalists think increasingly alike, no matter social background. Factors still being highly relevant, though, are gender, journalistic training and place of work. Those factors determine journalists’ positions in the field and consequently form their professional identities into various shapes.