The authors welcome feedback on this report and suggestions on how to improve our work via reuters.institute@politics.ox.ac.uk as well as potential partnerships and support for our ongoing work. In the meantime here is a list of further reading.
Other Relevant Surveys
- William Dutton and Grant Blank, Next Generation Users: The Internet in Britain in 2011 (Oxford: Oxford Internet Institute, 2011)
- Ofcom, Measuring News Consumption and Attitudes (July 2012)
- — The Communications Market (July 2012)
- Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, The State of the News Media (Mar. 2013)
- World Internet Report Fourth Edition (December 2012)
Other Relevant Publications from the Reuters Institute
(all available from https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/page/publications)
- Nicola Bruno and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Survival is Success: Journalistic Online Start-Ups in Western Europe (2012)
- Lara Fielden, Regulating for Trust in Journalism: Standards Regulation in the Age of Blended Media (2011)
- Robin Foster, News Plurality in a Digital World (2012)
- David A. L. Levy and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (eds), The Changing Business of Journalism and its Implications for Democracy (2010)
- John Lloyd, Truth Matters: The BBC and Our Need for It to be Right (2012)
- Nic Newman, Mainstream Media and the Distribution of News in the Age of Social Discovery
- — #UKelection2010, Mainstream Media and the Role of the Internet: How Social and Digital Media Affected the Business of Politics and Journalism (2010)
- — The Rise of Social Media and its Impact on Mainstream Journalism
- Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Ten Years that Shook the Media World: Questions and Trends in International Media (2012)
- Richard Sambrook, Are Foreign Correspondents Redundant? (2010)
- — Delivering Trust: Impartiality and Objectivity in the Digital Age(2012)
- Simon Terrington and David A. L. Levy, The Public Appetite for Foreign News on TV and Online (2013)