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The role of policy mixes in enabling journalism innovation: a transnational study across five countries
Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.15166
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2025
Sprache
English
TORE-DOI
Volume
19
Start Page
1511
End Page
1532
Citation
International Journal of Communication 19: 1511-1532 (2025)
Publisher Link
Scopus ID
Publisher
University of Southern California
Research has largely overlooked the macro-level conditions under which journalism innovation occurs. This study addresses the prevailing gap through a cross-country case study approach, critically examining the form, context, and nature of innovation policies for private media. Applying the policy mix framework, we analyze data from 30 semistructured interviews and 32 documents from Canada, Denmark, France, Norway, and the Netherlands. Our findings reveal that several countries have adopted a mix of different policy instruments to foster journalism innovation. They further show that innovation-policymaking for journalism often follows several uncoordinated, small events. However, despite societal trust in this type of public funding for journalism, inconsistency, incomprehensiveness, and incoherence persist in existing policy mixes. Our study yields significance for both academia and policymaking by underscoring the relevance of integrating innovation policy theory into journalism innovation research and providing practitioners with guidance for improving existing policy mixes in the future.
Subjects
case study research | innovation policy | journalism innovation | policy mix | public funding
DDC Class
070: Journalism and Publishing
338: Production
320: Political Science
302: Social Interaction
Publication version
publishedVersion
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