Gatekeeping, Gatewatching and the Art of Crowdsourcing in African Media Systems: A Case of Zambian Newsrooms

Gregory Gondwe
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Abstract

Abstract This article reports on a study that contributes to the literature on gatekeeping, gatewatching and crowdsourcing in African contexts. It does so by significantly expanding the scope, and theoretically incorporating the value of information and message content, through which the study revealed how citizen journalists only participate in the already existing media agenda. Citizen journalists are not professional journalists, instead they transmit information using social media platforms. By analysing a total of 2 418 stories from social media users and conducting surveys among 314 journalists, the study was able to demonstrate that journalists and the political elites are the main creators of news media agenda. The findings also suggest that journalists do not crowdsource to obtain a diversity of opinions, but rather to validate their already made agenda. These findings, although consistent with the extant literature, present an important topic to the so far understudied area of Africa.
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非洲媒体系统中的把关、把关与众包艺术:以赞比亚新闻编辑室为例
摘要本文报道了一项研究,该研究对非洲背景下的守门人、看门人和众包的文献做出了贡献。它通过显著扩大范围,并在理论上纳入信息和信息内容的价值来实现这一点,通过这一研究揭示了公民记者如何只参与已经存在的媒体议程。公民记者不是专业记者,而是利用社交媒体平台传播信息。通过分析来自社交媒体用户的2418个故事,并对314名记者进行调查,该研究能够证明记者和政治精英是新闻媒体议程的主要创造者。研究结果还表明,记者不是为了获得多样化的意见而众包,而是为了验证他们已经制定的议程。这些发现虽然与现有文献一致,但对迄今尚未得到充分研究的非洲地区提出了一个重要的主题。
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15
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