New Pew Study: Nonprofit Journalism Doesn’t Mean Ideology-Free

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By Joshua Benton on Nieman Journalism Lab, July 18 – Pew’s Project for Excellence in Journalism is out with a new study this morning that looks at the new universe of nonprofit journalism — and tries to get beyond the ProPublicas of the world to see who else is producing journalism under the legal structure of a 501(c)3 exemption. After all, remember, “nonprofit” signals a tax status, not a belief system or a commitment to any particular ideals, journalistic or otherwise.

The study found more than a little ideology lurking under that IRS umbrella. Of the 46 sites examined — 39 nonprofit and 7 commercial as a control — around half “produced news coverage that was clearly ideological in nature,” the researchers report.

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Encyclo on Nieman Journalism Lab

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Nieman Journalism Labs introduced an online encyclopedia-style website not too long ago where information about big media players is constantly being updated.

On the site’s about page Nieman Lab describes what you’ll find on Encyclo:

Our initial focus is on the companies and organizations that are having a big impact on the future of news. That includes a lot of traditional news organizations doing innovative work (like The New York TimesThe AtlanticThe Guardian, and CNN) and a lot of newcomers whose business models are made possible by the Internet (like Talking Points Memo,GlobalPost, and West Seattle Blog). Some are nonprofits focusing on high-end investigative and watchdog work; some are building around cheap commodity content or aggregation and hoping search engine optimization.

If you’re referencing a particular media or technology company on a website or blog you can grab code from the Encyclo site to give readers additional information about that company.

You can find out more about Enyclo here.