The Changing Boundaries of Journalistic Objectivity: Hybrid Journalism, Standpoint Theory, and Editorial Ethics in Poland

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Titel: The Changing Boundaries of Journalistic Objectivity: Hybrid Journalism, Standpoint Theory, and Editorial Ethics in Poland
Autoren: Anna Jupowicz-Ginalska, Greta Gober
Quelle: Roczniki Nauk Społecznych, Vol 53, Iss 1, Pp 7-25 (2025)
Verlagsinformationen: Towarzystwo Naukowe Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego Jana Pawła II, 2025.
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Bestand: LCC:Social sciences (General)
LCC:Communication. Mass media
Schlagwörter: objectivity, epistemic accountability, hybrid journalism, standpoint theory, editorial strategies, Social sciences (General), H1-99, Communication. Mass media, P87-96
Beschreibung: The concept of journalistic objectivity has undergone scrutiny in recent years. Traditionally regarded as a cornerstone of journalistic integrity, it is increasingly critiqued as an outdated standard that fails to reflect the complexities of contemporary societies. Nowhere is this debate more evident than in Poland, where polarization, government interference, and declining press freedom fuel skepticism about neutrality. At the same time, efforts to promote inclusivity challenge dominant narratives, raising questions about journalistic responsibility. This article examines how Polish media navigate objectivity amid political and economic pressures in an era of epistemic accountability. Through interviews with editors-in-chief and senior editors, the study explores how objectivity is redefined, what deviations from neutrality are deemed legitimate, and how newsrooms negotiate ethical commitments, social responsibility, and editorial independence. Drawing on standpoint theory and hybrid journalism, the analysis identifies five editorial strategies: values-driven objectivity, strategic framing, selective pluralism, fact-based editorial discipline, and critical engagement. Unlike past studies on ideological divides, this research focuses on how editors balance objectivity with social responsibility, editorial independence, and diversity.
Publikationsart: article
Dateibeschreibung: electronic resource
Sprache: English
Polish
ISSN: 0137-4176
2544-5812
Relation: https://czasopisma.tnkul.pl/index.php/rns/article/view/3754; https://doaj.org/toc/0137-4176; https://doaj.org/toc/2544-5812
DOI: 10.18290/rns2025.0006
Zugangs-URL: https://doaj.org/article/d5000892eef84af2bc2e87c5cc7431a0
Dokumentencode: edsdoj.5000892eef84af2bc2e87c5cc7431a0
Datenbank: Directory of Open Access Journals
Beschreibung
Abstract:The concept of journalistic objectivity has undergone scrutiny in recent years. Traditionally regarded as a cornerstone of journalistic integrity, it is increasingly critiqued as an outdated standard that fails to reflect the complexities of contemporary societies. Nowhere is this debate more evident than in Poland, where polarization, government interference, and declining press freedom fuel skepticism about neutrality. At the same time, efforts to promote inclusivity challenge dominant narratives, raising questions about journalistic responsibility. This article examines how Polish media navigate objectivity amid political and economic pressures in an era of epistemic accountability. Through interviews with editors-in-chief and senior editors, the study explores how objectivity is redefined, what deviations from neutrality are deemed legitimate, and how newsrooms negotiate ethical commitments, social responsibility, and editorial independence. Drawing on standpoint theory and hybrid journalism, the analysis identifies five editorial strategies: values-driven objectivity, strategic framing, selective pluralism, fact-based editorial discipline, and critical engagement. Unlike past studies on ideological divides, this research focuses on how editors balance objectivity with social responsibility, editorial independence, and diversity.
ISSN:01374176
25445812
DOI:10.18290/rns2025.0006