15 Facts About Citizen journalism

1.

Citizen journalism, known as collaborative media, participatory journalism, democratic journalism, guerrilla journalism or street journalism, is based upon public citizens "playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analyzing, and disseminating news and information.

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2.

Citizen journalism is a specific form of both citizen media and user-generated content.

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3.

Citizen journalism was made more feasible by the development of various online internet platforms.

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4.

Notable examples of citizen journalism reporting from major world events are, the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the Arab Spring, the Occupy Wall Street movement, the 2013 protests in Turkey, the Euromaidan events in Ukraine, and Syrian Civil War, the 2014 Ferguson unrest and the Black Lives Matter movement.

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5.

Critics of the phenomenon, including professional journalists and news organizations, claim that citizen journalism is unregulated, amateur, and haphazard in quality and coverage.

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6.

Literature of citizen, alternative, and participatory journalism is most often situated in a democratic context and theorized as a response to corporate news media dominated by an economic logic.

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7.

Therefore, citizens and journalists are portrayed as distinctive roles whereas journalism is used by citizens for citizenship and conversely, journalists serve citizens.

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8.

Recent trend in citizen journalism has been the emergence of what blogger Jeff Jarvis terms hyperlocal journalism, as online news sites invite contributions from local residents of their subscription areas, who often report on topics that conventional newspapers tend to ignore.

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9.

For instance, On Our Radar contains reporting mechanisms and trained residents that reveal their voices while questioning the reluctance Citizen journalism has when considering what voices are heard and are not, based in London.

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10.

Citizen journalism is a platform that provides a solution to the mistrust the public has towards the government as discrepancies arise from governmental statements and actions.

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11.

Citizen journalism has created much change and influence within Chinese media and society in which its online activity is very much controlled.

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12.

Citizen journalism journalists are needed and depended on by the mass public but are viewed as an imminent threat to their governments.

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13.

The various forms citizen journalism is formed has outdated many news and media sources as result of the authentic approach citizen journalists carry out.

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14.

Citizen journalism's found that these discourses were then challenged by others who questioned the gendered ideologies of male violence against women.

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15.

Citizen journalism increased during the last decade of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first century, associated with the creation of the internet which introduced new ways in communicating and engaging news.

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