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"They Always Get Our Story Wrong": Addressing Social Justice Activists' News Distrust Through Solidarity Reporting
[journal article]
Abstract This study positions social justice activists' objections to dominant reporting norms as a catalyst for critically reassessing these norms and their connection to diminishing trust in US journalism. Based on a conceptual application of discourse ethics to journalism and qualitative analysis of 28 in... view more
This study positions social justice activists' objections to dominant reporting norms as a catalyst for critically reassessing these norms and their connection to diminishing trust in US journalism. Based on a conceptual application of discourse ethics to journalism and qualitative analysis of 28 in-depth interviews with social justice activists, we examine how participants experience and evaluate mainstream coverage of social justice, and why they think journalism could improve its trustworthiness through practices consistent with solidarity reporting norms.... view less
Keywords
journalism; solidarity; confidence; news; social justice; reporting; social movement; United States of America; credibility
Classification
Communicator Research, Journalism
Impact Research, Recipient Research
Free Keywords
activism; news trust
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 286-296
Journal
Media and Communication, 11 (2023) 4
Issue topic
Trust, Social Cohesion, and Information Quality in Digital Journalism
ISSN
2183-2439
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed