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Engaged Journalism: Practices for Building Trust, Generating Revenue, and Fostering Civic Engagement

"Across the news industry, organizations large and small, commercial and nonprofit, single issue and daily news are experimenting with “engagement”: Audience engagement, engaged journalism, engagement editors and specialists, engaging for trust, and the list goes on. But what is engagement? Why are organizations experimenting with engagement, and to what effect? We set out to answer these questions through a four month research project where we surveyed the field to identify the practices organizations consider to be “engaged journalism,” an inclusive practice that prioritizes the information needs and wants of the community members it serves, creates collaborative space for the audience in all aspects of the journalistic process, and is dedicated to building and preserving trusting relationships between journalists and the public. We then dove deep into four very different organizations to learn not only what they do, but why they engage with communities, as well as how they know if their strategies are working.
Through this research, we find evidence to support the following: Engaged journalism increases audience trust in journalists and journalism organizations; engaged journalism builds trust among journalism organizations and audiences, which results in audiences being willing to financially support the journalism; engaged journalism results in audiences being more civically engaged in their communities. And while there’s evidence that engaged journalism can contribute to organizational sustainability, if there’s a single learning that applies to every organization we looked at, it’s that effective engagement requires a way for communities to be in contact with journalists in a relational rather than purely transactional manner. Furthermore, organizations that are able to clearly articulate a shared mission with their communities have the strongest foundation upon which to build relationships. As organizations continue to experiment with new forms of engagement and institutionalize those that work with their communities, they must also identify appropriate indicators of success, metrics, and research methods to understand if their engagement practices are having the desired effects, and if not, why.
But relationships take time. Funders of engaged journalism must take into account the fact that journalism organizations that are working in, with, and for communities require time and resources to build authentic relationships that put the principles of transparency, positivity, and diversity into action consistently. In the end, engaged journalism is just good journalism. It’s cultivating and listening to sources throughout the community, rather than in niche sectors or in the upper echelons of power. It’s producing hard-hitting, moving, and accurate stories that are relevant to community members and reflect their lived realities and meet their needs. And it’s understanding that journalism - whether it’s for profit or not - is a public service, and as such, must respect and include the public in its processes and practices." (Executive summary)
WHAT IS “ENGAGED JOURNALISM”, 6
Research Methods -- Research Review
CASE STUDIES, 18
Outlier Media – ProPublica -- Free Press: News Voices, North Carolina -- McClatchy -- Summary
RECOMMENDATIONS, 57