Publications

Participatory Journalism: Possibilities and Constraints for Audience Participation

2014 | Action IS0906

The Establishment of the Beneficial Rhizosphere

1998 | Action 821

European Research towards Safer and Better Food

1998 | Action null

SaPPART Guidelines Performance assessment of positioning terminals

2018 | Action TU1302

Avenues to Integration - Refugees in Contemporary Europe

1995 | Action C2

Materials for Steam Turbines

1989 | Action 505

Community Care for Very Old People Vol 10

1994 | Action A5

Bioactive Egg Compounds

2007 | Action 923

Quality of Life Information Services Towards a Sustainable Society for the Atmospheric Environment

2009 | Action ES0602

Participatory Journalism: Possibilities and Constraints for Audience Participation

2014 | Action IS0906
  • Author(s): Editor-in-Chief: Nada Zgrabljic Rotar (University of Zadar, Croatia) Guest Editor of the Special Issue: Igor Vobic (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia)

In late modern societies, communication is shaped by concepts such as heterogeneity, fragmentation and individualisation. Social networking sites, blogs, and micro-blogs have recently joined the billions of websites enabling different individual and collective actors that are scattered across the locales to participate in public communication in a variety of unprecedented ways. These online forms of communicative engagement have also facilitated the ideas of the collaborative and the collective in contemporary journalism of traditional media organisations. The “people formerly known as the audience”, as Jay Rosen acknowledged almost a decade ago, have actively started to contribute to the on-going processes of creating news websites in mainstream media and became variously engaged in participatory journalism. Despite the fact that the idea of participatory journalism engages people both inside and outside the newsrooms to communicate, not only to, but also with each other, there have been indications of inclusivist, and also exclusivist principles and practices, of collective and collaborative news making. The different modes of audience participation in journalism have, in some cases, eliminated some of the traditional ideals in journalism, such as truthiness, the principle of objectivity, and a disinterest in the shaping of political life, and have replaced them with alternatives, such as deliberation, multiperspectivity, and participation in political life. In this sense, the ordinary people have with professional assistance captured and published through words, photographic, or video stories of worldwide significance, and have shared personal perspectives or particular views from their small communities on issues of a larger significance, thereby reshaping the dynamics between the global and the (micro-)local in public communication.The authors of the articles that have been included in this special issue of Medijska istraživanja/Media Research consider the possibilities and constrains of participatory journalism  to be the starting points of their explorations. The issue consists of five scholarly articles: one theoretical discussion on participatory journalism in the Internet age, and four case studies from the Netherlands, Slovenia, Serbia, and Belgium.Contents:EditorialIgor Vobi? Reconsidering Participatory Journalism in the Internet Age Igor Vobi?, Peter Dahlgren Available at:

http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=165840

“It really is a Craft”: Repertoires in Journalistic Frontrunners’ Talk on Audience ParticipationMerel Borger, Irene Costera Meijer, Anita van Hoof, Jose Sanders Available at:

http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=165842

Abuse of Online Participatory Journalism in Slovenia: Offensive Comments under News Items Karmen Erjavec, Melita Poler-Kova?i?Available at:

http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=165843

  Co-construction and Deconstruction of Poverty on Serbian News WebsitesJelena Kleut, Smiljana Milinkov Available at:

http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=165844

 Identity, Contingency and Rigidity: The (Counter-) hegemonic Constructions of the Identity of the Media ProfessionalNico Carpentier

SaPPART Guidelines Performance assessment of positioning terminals

2018 | Action TU1302

This document provides guidelines for generic test procedures for the evaluation of GBPT performance, either by field tests, simulations or their combination, in line with the concepts and definitions already established in the SaPPART White Paper and Handbook. The document is intended to provide the reader with a helpful tool for planning the GBPT testing procedures by discussing testing in general and providing some detailed practical information.

Bioactive Egg Compounds

2007 | Action 923
  • Pages: 298
  • Author(s): R. Huopalahti, R. Lopez-Fandino, M. Anton, R. Schade,
  • Publisher(s): Springer
  • ISBN/ISSN: 978-3-540-37883-9

The book presents the latest results and concepts in the biotechnological use of egg compounds.

Quality of Life Information Services Towards a Sustainable Society for the Atmospheric Environment

2009 | Action ES0602

The chemical composition of the atmosphere has numerous impacts to the quality of human life. COST Action ES0602 organized a workshop in Thessaloniki (GR) in May 2008, devoted to quality of life information services. The main purpose of the workshop was to present and discuss existing Chemical Weather Forecasting and Information Systems, developed both by the Action participants, and by related important organisations such as the European Environment Agency and the US Environmental Protection Agency. The focus was specifically on the dissemination and the wider use of chemical weather forecasting information. It included a number of key presentations from invited experts from Europe and the United States, which are included in this publication.