Citizen Journalism vs. Mainstream Journalism: A Study On Challenges Posed by Amateurs
Citizen Journalism vs. Mainstream Journalism: A Study On Challenges Posed by Amateurs
Citizen journalism is a rapidly evolving form of journalism, which has enabled ordinary people
to report newsworthy situations around them. Nowadays mainstream media do not serve as the
only source of news. The alternative news sources on the Internet, such as blogs, web portals
and social networking sites give a good competition to mainstream media. The current study
aims to assess how journalists perceive the impact of citizen journalism on mainstream
journalism and their work. It endeavours to find out what challenges, if any, citizen journalism
has posed to mainstream media and how does the latter respond to them. A survey was
conducted among journalists working in Kashmir that helped to achieve the objectives of the
study. The study found that citizen journalism does not pose any imminent threat to mainstream
journalism since it is just in its formative years. In fact, citizen journalism holds potential
benefits as a source of news. It proves to be useful to bring to fore the stories that are
inaccessible to professional journalists.
Keywords: citizen journalism, ICT, mainstream journalism, new media, user-generated content
Introduction
Assistant Professor, Islamic University of Science and Technology, India.
https://doi.org/10.30958/ajmmc.3.1.4 doi=10.30958/ajmmc.3.1.4
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Review of Literature
Many scholars, however, have put forward entirely opposite views. Some
communication studies have drawn a conclusion that citizen journalism would
never be able to replace professional journalism, but can only compliment it.
Bentley (2008) affirms that citizen journalism can never replace professional
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journalism. He argues that citizen journalists want people to hear them just
because professional journalists are "too busy with the big stories to see the
little items that mean so much to people." Former Baltimore Sun reporter and
writer/producer of the popular TV series, "The Wire," David Simon (2005)
criticizes the concept of citizen journalism - claiming that unpaid bloggers who
write as a hobby cannot replace trained, professional, seasoned journalists.
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Objectives
Hypothesis
Methodology
The objectives were achieved by the Survey method, which is one of the most
familiar methods in Social Sciences. The primary tool for collection of data was a
questionnaire, for it is more economical in terms of time than other tools and
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Questionnaire Design
Sampling
A stratified sampling method was used for the Survey method. The study
encompassed a sample of 50 journalists. The distribution of questionnaires was
done on the basis of the experience of the journalists working in various print,
television, radio, wire and online organisations in Kashmir. First the population
was divided into three strata, viz., freshers (journalists who possess up to five
years of journalism experience), mid-career journalists (possessing six to
fifteen years of experience) and senior journalists (with over fifteen years of
experience). Then random samples were taken from each stratum. From the
former two strata, 17 respondents each were randomly selected, while 16
respondents were selected from the third stratum.
Pre-Test of Survey
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Statistical Analysis
The data was coded and entered in the Spreadsheet of SPSS (Statistical
Product and Service Solutions) Version 16 software. Various descriptive statistics
were employed. The Chi-square test was used in the study to test whether there is
any significant association between the experience of journalists and their views
on various aspects of citizen journalism with level of significance of 5%.
Findings
Personal Information
Research-based Information
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career journalists (58.8%) have access to new media for five to ten years and
the same percentage of freshers have new media access for less than five years.
As the p-value is 0.00 (Chi-Square=33.82), it shows that there is a strong
association between the experience of journalists and the access time span,
suggesting that more the experience, more is the time of access to new media
technologies.
All the respondents surveyed say they access citizen journalism content. As
far as the frequency of access to citizen journalism content is concerned, the
majority of the freshers (64.7%), the majority of the mid-career journalists (52.9%)
and the majority of the senior journalists (50%) often access CJ content. Overall
56% of the respondents often access the citizen journalism content, 26%
respondents rarely access the CJ content, while 18% respondents have regular
access to it. Here Chi-Square value is 1.07 and p-value is 0.89, which suggests that
there is no association between experience of the journalists and frequency of their
access to CJ content.
The majority of the respondents among freshers (52.9%), mid-career
journalists (41.2%) and senior journalists (31.3%) access citizen journalism
content on online media. Of all respondents, 42% access citizen journalism content
on online media. Chi-square value is 4.77 and p-value is 0.57, which means no
association exists between experience of the journalists and medium of access for
CJ content.
Almost 69% of the senior journalists have access to all types of citizen
journalism content, followed by 64.7% freshers and 58.8% of mid-career
journalists, who too access all types of CJ content. Since Chi-Square is 4.49 and p-
value is 0.61 here, there is no association between experience of journalists and
type of CJ content accessed.
Citizen journalism vs. traditional journalism. As it is evident from the
Table 2, the majority of the senior journalists (75%) and the majority of the
freshers (52.9%) say citizen journalism has changed the concept of journalism
for the better. Among mid-career journalists, while 35.3% respondents say
citizen journalism has changed the concept of journalism for the better, another
35.3% respondents say it has no impact on journalism. The p-value is greater
than 0.05 (Chi-Square=6.36 and p-value=0.38), which suggests that there is no
association between the experience of journalists and their views on impact of
citizen journalism on the concept of journalism.
A large percentage of freshers (82.4%), mid-career journalists (70.6%) and
senior journalists (68.8%) believe citizen journalism does not pose any
challenge to mainstream journalism. Overall 74% of the respondents believe
citizen journalism does not pose any challenge to mainstream journalism, while
20% say citizen journalism poses challenge to it only to some extent and 6%
believe it does pose some challenges to mainstream journalism. As the p-value
is greater than 0.05 (Chi-Square=3.73 and p-value=0.82), it indicates that there
is no association between the experience of journalists and their views on
challenges posed to journalism by citizen journalism.
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and Bahrain are broken by citizen journalists active in those countries. Some
respondents refer to the videos and pictures taken by amateurs during the
tsunami that had hit countries including Indonesia in 2005. They provided a
close-up view of the devastation much before the professional journalists could
reach the affected areas. Some respondents have also mentioned corruption
cases exposed by citizen journalists through "Right to Information (RTI)
movement." For instance a story headlined "Ghost Employees in MCD" was
exposed by a citizen journalist in Delhi through RTI.
One of the respondents points to the stories uploaded by citizen journalists on
social networking sites, in the form of videos, photographs and text, during the
mass uprising in Indian-administered Kashmir in 2008 and 2010. The posts mainly
highlighted stone pelting incidents and killings that took place in Kashmir during
the unrest. Many a time the news was found later in the traditional media. Some
other breaking news stories include "forest fire in Kumaon," "mafia-government
nexus," "molestation of a girl at Jaipur police station" and "burning of a bear by
people of a remote village at Tral in South Kashmir."
Among all three categories, the majority of the respondents feel that the
citizen journalism content is of average quality, viz., 75% of senior journalists,
70.6% freshers and 52.9% mid-career journalists. Overall, 66% respondents find
citizen journalism content of average quality. The Chi-Square value is 3.59 and the
p-value is 0.46, which suggests that there is no association between the experience
of the journalists and their opinion on quality of citizen journalism content.
75 percent of the senior journalists, and 64.7% each among freshers and mid-
career journalists rarely find citizen journalism content credible. Overall, 68%
respondents find citizen journalism content credible only on rare occasions. The p-
value here is 0.97% that suggests that there is no association between the
experience of the journalists and their views on credibility of citizen journalism
content.
The majority of the respondents, viz., 82.4% mid-career journalists, 68.8%
senior journalists and 64.7% freshers, feel citizen journalism content rarely
possesses news values. Overall, 72% of the respondents say citizen journalism
content possesses news values on rare occasions. The Chi-square value being 5.17
and p-value being 0.52 suggests that no association exists between journalists’
experience and their understanding of newsworthiness of citizen journalism
content.
76.5 percent freshers and 62.5% senior journalists feel citizen journalists
rarely follow journalistic ethics. Among mid-career journalists, while 47.1%
respondents say citizen journalists rarely follow journalistic ethics, another 47.1%
respondents say they never do. The p-value here is 0.36 (Chi-square=6.55), which
suggests that there is no association between the experience of the journalists and
their views on whether citizen journalists follow journalistic ethics.
The majority of the freshers (58.8%) and mid-career journalists (41.2%)
have rarely come across the citizen journalism content, which they feel is
unethical, while most of the senior journalists (37.5%) have never come across
such content. The Chi-square value here is 10.95 and the p-value is 0.09, which
suggests that not a very strong association exists between the professional
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Conclusion
The data collected during the study reveals that not many challenges are
posed by citizen journalism to mainstream journalism. The majority of the
journalists, irrespective of their journalism experience, believe that citizen
journalism does not pose any imminent threat to mainstream journalism since it is
just in its formative years. Mainstream media is believed to enjoy more
authenticity and credibility among the audience because of its elaborate and well-
established system of functioning, in which the emphasis remains on accuracy and
responsibility. The audience prefers news products by professional journalists over
the citizen journalism content. This is a clear indication that citizen journalism can
never replace professional journalism, but can only complement it. So the thought
that professional journalists nowadays have to compete with citizen journalists is
nothing but a myth. The main difference between mainstream journalism and
citizen journalism is voluntary nature of work. Citizen journalism is participatory
in nature while mainstream journalism is highly professional. The latter is more
than mere reporting of facts. So any person with a pen or camera in hand cannot
become a professional journalist unless trained in skills of observation,
understanding, expression and responsibility. Citizen journalism content is usually
of average quality and rarely possesses news values, while citizen journalists
rarely follow journalistic ethics. This also reduces the threat of citizen journalism
to mainstream journalism.
The biggest challenge seen by some respondents is that citizen journalists
can sometimes break news on the Internet even before professional journalists.
This has reduced the dependability of the general audience on mainstream
media. Some respondents say even if they have not come across breaking news
stories by citizen journalists, there are instances where the content provided by
them has become the first clue for professional journalists’ stories. At times, a
sense of insecurity creeps in the professional journalists when they see citizen
journalists breaking the stories and hogging the limelight. But instead of seeing it
as a threat, it must be seen as an opportunity to raise the bar further and bring an
improvement in one’s own work. The best response to challenges, if any, posed
by citizen journalists to professionals is to encourage them to do better, and work
in tandem with them for bigger and greater impact. Citizen journalism has been
and can always be used as a news source by mainstream media. It supplements
the work of mainstream journalists. Citizen journalists scratch the surface, while
professional journalists move in to complete the job. Even though citizen
journalists have come up with some breaking news stories on certain occasions,
mainstream journalists still enjoy more credibility, authenticity and popularity
among the audience than the former.
The maximum number of respondents suggest citizen journalism should be
encouraged for the future and believe that it is going to stay given the advances
in new media technologies, such as camera phones, camcorders, blogs, social
networking and media-sharing websites, and so on. Citizen journalism, in the
coming days, is believed to become more accessible to people worldwide, since
more and more people are becoming techno-savvy. Besides, some established
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news organisations, like CNN-IBN and others give a good space to citizen
journalism content and seek citizen inputs (text/photos) about public issues. So
citizen journalism is believed to grow in future with mainstream media outlets
constantly encouraging it.
The majority of the respondents surveyed feel that citizen journalism has
changed the concept of journalism for the better. It provides ordinary citizens
with an opportunity to highlight the genuine issues that may be skipped by
professional journalists. Citizen journalism, thus, adds value to the mainstream
news coverage by bringing to light the issues at the grassroots level that are
otherwise overlooked by big media outlets. Nowadays even reputed media
organisations use citizen journalism content in their newscasts and
documentaries. The content is believed to hold high significance in the
contemporary times, even if its quality is low. Citizen journalism is a path-
breaking concept that makes a consumer a contributor. It gives citizens the
power to express themselves and participate in social and political change.
Contrarily, some respondents have presented the other side of citizen
journalism. They believe it has had more negative than positive effects on the
concept of journalism. It has given rise to what some people call "journalism of
assertion." It means unsubstantiated opinion and rumor is passed on as fact,
which harms journalistic credibility. There is also lack of restraint among online
writers. The citizen journalists may violate the ethical standards and
sensationalize stories in the absence of gatekeeping. There is also confusion as to
whom to call a journalist, when anyone can publish. Citizen journalists do not
abide to the traditional news values. They also show little knowledge of concepts
like newsworthiness. Since they are not obliged to follow the framework of
traditional media, their works tend to be less credible. Besides, there is a
tendency of plagiarism as far as citizen journalism content is concerned. At times
citizen journalists have also been found to upload unethical content. Some
respondents say citizen journalists tend to focus only on one side of the issue or
development, hence making the story unbalanced. The stories are heavily slanted
in some cases. Citizen journalists many a time sensationalize things in an
unethical manner. In quite some cases, one can find a citizen journalist
transgressing ethical, professional and even legal standards either out of
ignorance or willfully with malicious intent.
Most of the respondents believe that implementation of gatekeeping to citizen
journalism content is a must to ensure its credibility. They stress upon having a
proper mechanism to filter the news content, be it in the form of text or images,
posted by citizen journalists. The details presented by citizen journalists should be
verified and cross-checked from multiple sources and edited by professional
editors before making them public. The job of citizen journalists must be to lead
mainstream journalists to news that is inaccessible to the latter. Some respondents
suggest that citizen journalists should be taught the basic and the most vital
journalistic ethics to ensure credibility of the citizen journalism content. The
organisations offering citizen journalism platform, be it websites, television news
channels or newspapers, should start journalism classes for citizen journalists to
educate them with journalistic ethics. The need for accurate, fair and balanced
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Limitations of Study
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