Yet more thoughts on journalism and democracy

Newspaper pressesI’ve been pon­der­ing the rela­tion­ship between journ­al­ism and demo­cracy of late, and so too have the aca­demic com­menters gath­er­ing at the blog of Social Sci­ence Research Coun­cil boss, Craig Cal­houn.

Cal­houn asks the ques­tion Sam Zell has already answeredWhat is the future of news­pa­pers? And when social sci­ent­ists smell blood, they’re mostly rub­bing their hands at the pro­spect of a fresh cada­ver to dis­sect rather than offer­ing sym­pathy or solutions.

There’s not much in the com­ments that reg­u­lar read­ers won’t be overly famil­iar with — foundation-funded journ­al­ism any­one? But bur­ied within them is Michael Schud­son offer­ing his usual top class, ana­lyt­ical two cents: Con­tinue read­ing

Public relations: pros and cons of the open-door policy

Jonathan Rauch, writ­ing about GM’s elec­tric car pro­ject — the Volt — has an excel­lent example of the PR risks that go with an open-door media policy (a strategy that almost all journ­al­ists would advocate).

Rauch loc­ates his own piece within GM’s pub­lic rela­tions strategy (in the print edi­tion there’s an ad for the Volt, com­plete with funky and optim­istic designer). Con­tinue read­ing