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E-raamat: Data Journalism Handbook: Towards A Critical Data Practice

Contributions by , Contributions by (Proyecto Inventario), Edited by , Contributions by (data visualisation specialist), Contributions by (Rappler), Contributions by (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), Contributions by (Independent journalist, Cofounder Land Conflict Watch), Edited by , Contributions by (Thomson Reuters, City University), Contributions by (The Washington Post)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Digital Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Mar-2021
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789048542079
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Digital Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Mar-2021
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789048542079

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The Data Journalism Handbook: Towards a Critical Data Practice provides a rich and panoramic introduction to data journalism, combining both critical reflection and practical insight. It offers a diverse collection of perspectives on how data journalism is done around the world and the broader consequences of datafication in the news, serving as both a textbook and a sourcebook for this emerging field. With more than 50 chapters from leading researchers and practitioners of data journalism, it explores the work needed to render technologies and data productive for journalistic purposes. It also gives a "behind the scenes" look at the social lives of data sets, data infrastructures, and data stories in newsrooms, media organizations, start-ups, civil society organizations and beyond. The book includes sections on "doing issues with data," "assembling data," "working with data," "experiencing data," "investigating data, platforms and algorithms," "organizing data journalism," "learning data journalism together" and "situating data journalism."

Arvustused

"This is a stellar collection that spans applied and scholarly perspectives on practices of data journalism, rich with insights into the work of making data tell stories." - Kate Crawford, New York University

"This stimulating new book offers researchers and journalists alike the welcome chance to reflect critically on how important new uses of quantification are inspiring what has become known as data journalism. The variety of voices, data, and examples are revelatory." - Wendy Espeland, Northwestern University

"It is now established that data is entangled with politics and embedded in history and society. This bountiful book highlights the crucial role of data journalists as users and critics of data, and in facilitating public engagement and discussion around it." - Emmanuel Didier, Ecole normale supérieure

"Profound and practical, this sparkling collection engages the topic of data journalism with rich insights into the nature of numbers in the news." - Geoffrey C. Bowker, University of California, Irvine

"This book is an impressive feat. Bounegru and Gray have put together a truly global and diverse collection that greatly enriches our understanding of the politics of data and what it means for journalism. In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, this contribution is more important than ever." - Lina Dencik, Cardiff University

"Ostensibly focused on data journalism, this handbook is so much more, providing an overarching analysis of much of the emerging field of critical data studies. Journalists and others interested in how to assemble, work with, make sense of, apply, and critically reflect on data and their uses will revel in the extensive theoretical and practical insights." - Rob Kitchin, Maynooth University

"The Data Journalism Handbook is an indispensable resource for students, researchers, and journalists who want to understand how data are translated into information, information in knowledge and, ultimately, wisdom. That itinerary all starts with a full comprehension of how data reflect, construct and shape our social reality." - José van Dijck, Utrecht University

"The variety, diversity, and depth of the contributions to this collective effort make this book a required reading for beginners and professionals alike." - Alberto Cairo, University of Miami

"This magical multitudinous book is an experiment that will shape the future of critical data journalism." - Celia Lury, University of Warwick

"By providing a wealth of living testimonies from practitioners and academics from different countries, this book gives a rich overview of practices that have become key in contemporary journalism. The main virtue of this book is to give a set of practical insights to help journalists not only to better cooperate with their peers but also to establish more fruitful relationships with researchers and publics." - Sylvain Parasie, Sciences Po

"This wide-ranging and thoughtfully curated volume is an essential companion for researchers and practitioners who seek to rethink what data can mean for themselves and their audiences." - Yanni A. Loukissas, Georgia Tech

"An intelligent and cutting-edge entry-point to the field of data journalism, sure to become an essential part of curricula and research around this topic." - Anja Bechmann, Aarhus University

Introduction 11(16)
Jonathan Gray
L. Uiana Bounegru
Doing Issues With Data
1 From Coffee to Colonialism: Data Investigations Into How the Poor Feed the Rich
27(4)
Raul Sanchez
Ximena V. Ulagrdn
2 Repurposing Census Data to Measure Segregation in the United States
31(3)
Aaron Williams
3 Multiplying Memories while Discovering Trees in Bogota
34(3)
Maria Isabel Magana
4 Behind the Numbers: Home Demolitions in Occupied East Jerusalem
37(4)
Mohammed Haddad
5 Mapping Crash Incidents to Advocate for Road Safety in the Philippines
41(3)
Aika Rey
6 Tracking Worker Deaths in Turkey
44(5)
Pinar Dag
Assembling Data
7 Building Your Own Data Set: Documenting Knife Crime in the United Kingdom
49(6)
Caelainn Barr
8 Narrating a Number and Staying With the Trouble of Value
55(10)
Helen Verran
9 Indigenous Data Sovereignty: Implications for Data Journalism
65(9)
Tahu Kukutai
Maggie Walter
10 Alternative Data Practices in China
74(10)
Yolanda Jinxin Ma
11 Making a Database to Document Land Conflicts Across India
84(3)
Kumar Sambhav Shrivastava
Ankur Paliwal
12 Reassembling Public Data in Cuba: Collaborations When Information Is Missing, Outdated or Scarce
87(4)
Saimi Reyes Carmona
Yudividn Almeida Cruz
Ernesto Guerra
13 Making Data With Readers at La Nation
91(5)
Flor Coelho
14 Running Surveys for Investigations
96(7)
Crina-Gabriela Boros
Working With Data
15 Data Journalism: What's Feminism Got to Do With IX?
103(6)
Catherine D'Ignazio
16 Infrastructuring Collaborations Around the Panama and Paradise Papers
109(7)
Emilia Diaz-Struck
Cecile Schilis-Gallego
Pierre Romera
17 Text as Data: Finding Stories in Text Collections
116(8)
Barbara Maseda
18 Coding With Data in the Newsroom
124(4)
Basile Simon
19 Accounting for Methods: Spreadsheets, Scripts and Programming Notebooks
128(10)
Sam Leon
20 Working Openly in Data Journalism
138(5)
Natalia Mazotte
21 Making Algorithms Work for Reporting
143(4)
Jonathan Stray
22 Journalism With Machines? From Computational Thinking to Distributed Cognition
147(10)
Eddy Borges-Rey
Experiencing Data
23 Ways of Doing Data Journalism
157(5)
Sarah Cohen
24 Data Visualizations: Newsroom Trends and Everyday Engagements
162(12)
Helen Kennedy
William Allen
Martin Engebretsen
Rosemary Lucy Hill
Andy Kirk
Wibke Weber
25 Sketching With Data
174(8)
Mona Chalabi
Jonathan Gray
26 The Web as Medium for Data Visualization
182(11)
Elliot Bentley
27 Four Recent Developments in News Graphics
193(4)
Gregor Aisch
Lisa Charlotte Rost
28 Searchable Databases as a Journalistic Product
197(9)
Zara Rahman
Stefan Wehrmeyer
29 Narrating Water Conflict With Data and Interactive Comics
206(5)
Nelly Luna Amancio
30 Data Journalism Should Focus on People and Stories
211(8)
Winny de Jong
Investigating Data, Platforms and Algorithms
31 The Algorithms Beat: Angles and Methods for Investigation
219(11)
Nicholas Diakopoulos
32 Telling Stories With the Social Web
230(11)
Lam Thuy Vo
33 Digital Forensics: Repurposing Google Analytics IDs
241(5)
Richard Rogers
34 Apps and Their Affordances for Data Investigations
246(11)
Esther Weltevrede
35 Algorithms in the Spotlight: Collaborative Investigations at Der Spiegel
257(10)
Christina Elmer
Organizing Data Journalism
36 The #ddj Hashtag on Twitter
267(7)
Eunice Au
Marc Smith
37 Archiving Data Journalism
274(5)
Meredith Broussard
38 From The Guardian to Google News Lab: A Decade of Working in Data Journalism
279(7)
Simon Rogers
39 Data Journalism's Ties With Civic Tech
286(5)
Stefan Baack
40 Open-Source Coding Practices in Data Journalism
291(4)
Ryan Pitts
Lindsay Muscato
41 Data Feudalism: How Platforms Shape Cross-border Investigative Networks
295(4)
Stefan Candea
42 Data-Driven Editorial? Considerations for Working With Audience Metrics
299(8)
Caitlin Petre
Learning Data Journalism Together
43 Data Journalism, Digital Universalism and Innovation in the Periphery
307(7)
Anita Say Chan
44 The Datafication of Journalism: Strategies for Data-Driven Storytelling and Industry-Academy Collaboration
314(17)
Damian Radcliffe
Seth C. Lewis
45 Data Journalism by, about and for Marginalized Communities
331(7)
Eva Constantaras
46 Teaching Data Journalism
338(6)
Cheryl Phillips
47 Organizing Data Projects With Women and Minorities in Latin America
344(7)
Eliana A. VacaMunoz
Situating Data Journalism
48 Genealogies of Data Journalism
351(9)
C. W. Anderson
49 Data-Driven Gold Standards: What the Field Values as Award-Worthy Data Journalism
360(10)
Wiebke Loosen
50 Beyond Clicks and Shares: How and Why to Measure the Impact of Data Journalism Projects
370(9)
Lindsay Green-Barber
51 Data Journalism: In Whose Interests?
379(9)
Mary Lynn Young
Candis Callison
52 Data Journalism With Impact
388(9)
Paul Bradshaw
53 What Is Data Journalism For? Cash, Clicks, and Cut and Trys
397(8)
Nikki Usher
54 Data Journalism and Digital Liberalism
405(6)
Dominic Boyer
Index 411
Liliana Bounegru is Lecturer in Digital Methods at the Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London, co-founder of the Public Data Lab and Research Associate at the Digital Methods Initiative, University of Amsterdam. Jonathan Gray is Lecturer in Critical Infrastructure Studies at the Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London, co-founder of the Public Data Lab and Research Associate at the Digital Methods Initiative, University of Amsterdam.