“Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases

This contribution explores the links between the traditional work routines in investigative journalism and those, emergent ones, in « data journalism ». How do the European journalistic cultures react to this phenomenon, widely considered as a potential vector of profound destabilization of the esta...

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Main Authors: Juliette Charbonneaux, Pergia Gkouskou-Giannakou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em Jornalismo 2015-12-01
Series:Brazilian Journalism Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/855
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spelling doaj-d4a8b8a766364963a2e74c37262ab4632020-11-24T23:21:17ZengAssociação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em JornalismoBrazilian Journalism Research1808-40791981-98542015-12-0111224426710.25200/BJR.v11n2.2015.855602“Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek casesJuliette Charbonneaux0Pergia Gkouskou-Giannakou1CELSA Paris-SorbonneUniversidade Blaise Pascal (Clermont-Ferrand 2)This contribution explores the links between the traditional work routines in investigative journalism and those, emergent ones, in « data journalism ». How do the European journalistic cultures react to this phenomenon, widely considered as a potential vector of profound destabilization of the established professional practices of the field and thus redefining the – fuzzy per se – contours of a profession that is already questioning its future? The issue here is to examine the extent to which the discourse on « data journalism » also reflects investigation practices and, through it, the professional ethics and journalistic ideals. With this intention, we put in parallel two European cases, namely the German the Greek one. The comparison of the two cases, by getting into the details of this proximity, clarifies the structuring of a professional discourse, the imaginaires feeding it on, and highlights - through the rhetoric of visualization – how the implicit dimension in the discourse about “data journalism” relates to a great extent to the way the information is given to read.This contribution explores the links between the traditional work routines in investigative journalism and those, emergent ones, in « data journalism ». How do the European journalistic cultures react to this phenomenon, widely considered as a potential vector of profound destabilization of the established professional practices of the field and thus redefining the – fuzzy per se – contours of a profession that is already questioning its future? The issue here is to examine the extent to which the discourse on « data journalism » also reflects investigation practices and, through it, the professional ethics and journalistic ideals. With this intention, we put in parallel two European cases, namely the German the Greek one. The comparison of the two cases, by getting into the details of this proximity, clarifies the structuring of a professional discourse, the imaginaires feeding it on, and highlights - through the rhetoric of visualization – how the implicit dimension in the discourse about “data journalism” relates to a great extent to the way the information is given to read.https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/855Data-journalismGermanyGreeceImaginaryInvestigative journalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juliette Charbonneaux
Pergia Gkouskou-Giannakou
spellingShingle Juliette Charbonneaux
Pergia Gkouskou-Giannakou
“Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases
Brazilian Journalism Research
Data-journalism
Germany
Greece
Imaginary
Investigative journalism
author_facet Juliette Charbonneaux
Pergia Gkouskou-Giannakou
author_sort Juliette Charbonneaux
title “Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases
title_short “Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases
title_full “Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases
title_fullStr “Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases
title_full_unstemmed “Data Journalism”, an investigation Practice? A glance at the German and Greek cases
title_sort “data journalism”, an investigation practice? a glance at the german and greek cases
publisher Associação Brasileira de Pesquisadores em Jornalismo
series Brazilian Journalism Research
issn 1808-4079
1981-9854
publishDate 2015-12-01
description This contribution explores the links between the traditional work routines in investigative journalism and those, emergent ones, in « data journalism ». How do the European journalistic cultures react to this phenomenon, widely considered as a potential vector of profound destabilization of the established professional practices of the field and thus redefining the – fuzzy per se – contours of a profession that is already questioning its future? The issue here is to examine the extent to which the discourse on « data journalism » also reflects investigation practices and, through it, the professional ethics and journalistic ideals. With this intention, we put in parallel two European cases, namely the German the Greek one. The comparison of the two cases, by getting into the details of this proximity, clarifies the structuring of a professional discourse, the imaginaires feeding it on, and highlights - through the rhetoric of visualization – how the implicit dimension in the discourse about “data journalism” relates to a great extent to the way the information is given to read.This contribution explores the links between the traditional work routines in investigative journalism and those, emergent ones, in « data journalism ». How do the European journalistic cultures react to this phenomenon, widely considered as a potential vector of profound destabilization of the established professional practices of the field and thus redefining the – fuzzy per se – contours of a profession that is already questioning its future? The issue here is to examine the extent to which the discourse on « data journalism » also reflects investigation practices and, through it, the professional ethics and journalistic ideals. With this intention, we put in parallel two European cases, namely the German the Greek one. The comparison of the two cases, by getting into the details of this proximity, clarifies the structuring of a professional discourse, the imaginaires feeding it on, and highlights - through the rhetoric of visualization – how the implicit dimension in the discourse about “data journalism” relates to a great extent to the way the information is given to read.
topic Data-journalism
Germany
Greece
Imaginary
Investigative journalism
url https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/article/view/855
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