posted on 2015-02-09, 14:20authored byVincent P. Campbell
Citizen journalism has become a prominent term referring to a variety of newsgathering and
reporting practices conducted via a range of new digital technologies. The scholarly literature on
citizen journalism, however, has tended to concentrate on its significance for journalism theory and
practice whilst comparatively neglecting underlying questions about the theories of citizenship
utilized within citizen journalism. This article examines the range of theories of citizenship at work in
citizen journalism, highlighting problems in trying to locate citizen journalism practices and
practitioners within definitional debates around citizenship. It explores how some theories construct
citizen journalism as a tool for citizenship whilst others construct it as constituting a form of
citizenship in its own right. The article identifies a range of problems within these theories in terms
of their capacity to understand the relationship between citizen journalism and citizenship. It argues
that fully understanding and situating citizen journalism requires moving beyond the journalismcentered
focus which dominates the literature towards a consideration of citizen journalism that
incorporates theories and practices of citizenship alongside those of journalism.
History
Citation
Digital Journalism
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Media and Communication