Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > “Journalists” without a press card- cross-borde...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

“Journalists” without a press card- cross-border cooperation of Chinese private news organizations

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

“Journalists” without a press card- cross-border cooperation of Chinese private news organizations. / Yin, Qi; Zheng, Sharon.
In: Journalism, Vol. 26, No. 4, 30.04.2025, p. 881-899.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Yin Q, Zheng S. “Journalists” without a press card- cross-border cooperation of Chinese private news organizations. Journalism. 2025 Apr 30;26(4):881-899. Epub 2024 Dec 5. doi: 10.1177/14648849241306885

Author

Bibtex

@article{258d74f332ff42d0879a7acb5fe0896f,
title = "“Journalists” without a press card- cross-border cooperation of Chinese private news organizations",
abstract = "Commencing with the distinctive institutional environment of China, this study broadens the perspective of cross-border journalism from the transnational/international dimension to the institutional dimension. Drawing upon embeddedness theory, the research delves into the forms, scope, and characteristics of cross-border cooperative relationships established by private news organizations as a means for grappling with dual legitimacy dilemmas to embed themselves in the journalistic field. Qualitative interviews with 24 Chinese unlicensed journalists in private news organizations reveal a preference for their cross-border collaboration with government and state-owned media, possessing political or cultural authority, while deliberately avoiding engagement with foreign media, self-media and users. This pattern of cross-border cooperation exhibits a distinctive trait of dependency embeddedness. Furthermore, it is observed that these practices primarily serve as self-protection measures with limited impact on publicity and the democratic development of journalism. These findings contribute to our comprehension of the self-protection strategies employed by China{\textquoteright}s private news organizations and their unlicensed journalists in the digital media era, offering a novel institutional perspective in understanding cross-border journalism practices within a non-Western context.",
author = "Qi Yin and Sharon Zheng",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1177/14648849241306885",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "881--899",
journal = "Journalism",
issn = "1464-8849",
publisher = "Sage",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “Journalists” without a press card- cross-border cooperation of Chinese private news organizations

AU - Yin, Qi

AU - Zheng, Sharon

PY - 2025/4/30

Y1 - 2025/4/30

N2 - Commencing with the distinctive institutional environment of China, this study broadens the perspective of cross-border journalism from the transnational/international dimension to the institutional dimension. Drawing upon embeddedness theory, the research delves into the forms, scope, and characteristics of cross-border cooperative relationships established by private news organizations as a means for grappling with dual legitimacy dilemmas to embed themselves in the journalistic field. Qualitative interviews with 24 Chinese unlicensed journalists in private news organizations reveal a preference for their cross-border collaboration with government and state-owned media, possessing political or cultural authority, while deliberately avoiding engagement with foreign media, self-media and users. This pattern of cross-border cooperation exhibits a distinctive trait of dependency embeddedness. Furthermore, it is observed that these practices primarily serve as self-protection measures with limited impact on publicity and the democratic development of journalism. These findings contribute to our comprehension of the self-protection strategies employed by China’s private news organizations and their unlicensed journalists in the digital media era, offering a novel institutional perspective in understanding cross-border journalism practices within a non-Western context.

AB - Commencing with the distinctive institutional environment of China, this study broadens the perspective of cross-border journalism from the transnational/international dimension to the institutional dimension. Drawing upon embeddedness theory, the research delves into the forms, scope, and characteristics of cross-border cooperative relationships established by private news organizations as a means for grappling with dual legitimacy dilemmas to embed themselves in the journalistic field. Qualitative interviews with 24 Chinese unlicensed journalists in private news organizations reveal a preference for their cross-border collaboration with government and state-owned media, possessing political or cultural authority, while deliberately avoiding engagement with foreign media, self-media and users. This pattern of cross-border cooperation exhibits a distinctive trait of dependency embeddedness. Furthermore, it is observed that these practices primarily serve as self-protection measures with limited impact on publicity and the democratic development of journalism. These findings contribute to our comprehension of the self-protection strategies employed by China’s private news organizations and their unlicensed journalists in the digital media era, offering a novel institutional perspective in understanding cross-border journalism practices within a non-Western context.

U2 - 10.1177/14648849241306885

DO - 10.1177/14648849241306885

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 881

EP - 899

JO - Journalism

JF - Journalism

SN - 1464-8849

IS - 4

ER -