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Tag: civic engagement

In Laconia, N.H., a journey from Holocaust denial to civic engagement

Downtown Laconia, N.H. Photo (cc) 2018 by capleez.

In Laconia, New Hampshire, publishing a letter from someone who denied that the Holocaust took place ended up leading to something positive — a long-term exercise in engaging the community around the paper’s opinion journalism.

The letter, according to an essay at the American Press Institute’s website by Julie Hart, The Laconia Daily Sun‘s digital editor, was from a well-known person who had said he was considering running for public office. That, and the paper’s longstanding policy of publishing virtually every letter it received, led to those hateful words making their way into print. Hart acknowledged that people at the Sun quickly realized they’d made a mistake.

With the help of grant money, the paper embarked on a project to bring together people with different points of view for some deep conversation and reflection to see if they could bridge the ideological divide. The exercise involved techniques such as “looping,” with Hart describes as helping people “re-state what they’re hearing from a partner in conversation to demonstrate active listening and objectively capturing information, regardless of whether or not they agree.”

The one sour note was the Sun’s decision to drop editorial cartoons after a Mike Luckovich effort critical of police shootings of Black people led to “angry phone calls, advertisers canceling their marketing campaigns, a slew of Facebook comments and calls to boycott.” As you can see, Luckovich’s cartoon was over the top, but using judgment in deciding which cartoons to publish would have made more sense than a blanket ban.

Still, the Sun’s efforts are admirable and fit in well with the idea that local journalism can be a vital spark for civic engagement. As I’ve written previously, community life can be an antidote to the hateful discourse that now pervades national politics (sorry, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t point out that it’s mostly on the Republican side), and that reliable journalism is a key to making it happen.

Author Dan KennedyPosted on February 4, 2021Categories Local NewsTags American Press Institute, civic engagement, Laconia Daily Sun

Talking about journalism and civic engagement

Last Tuesday I moderated a panel at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester on “The Role of the Media in Civic Life,” sponsored by the Worcester Regional Research Bureau.

We all had the opportunity to hear from some really smart and interesting people: Jim Normandin, publisher of the Telegram & Gazette of Worcester; Walter Bird Jr., the editor of Worcester Magazine; Andy Lacombe of Charter TV3 News; and Jordan Levy, a former Worcester politico who’s now the host of a talk show on WTAG Radio.

In case you’d like to see what you missed, I’ve posted the video.

Author Dan KennedyPosted on April 13, 2015Categories MediaTags Andy Lacombe, Charter TV3 News, civic engagement, Holy Cross, Jim Normandin, Jordan Levy, Walter Bird Jr., Worcester Magazine, Worcester Regional Research Bureau, Worcester Telegram, WTAG1 Comment on Talking about journalism and civic engagement

Hyperlocal news and civic engagement

Writing in the American Journalism Review, Barb Palser argues that the new breed of hyperlocal news sites may fall short of expectations because there just isn’t enough demand:

According to a survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, only 20 percent of American adults reported using digital tools to communicate with their neighbors or stay informed about community issues at least once in the past year. Only one in 10 reported reading a community blog at least once in the past year.

Palser’s pessimism intersects nicely with an observation I (and others) have been making for some time: that disengagement from civic life is among the most persistent problems plaguing the news business. It doesn’t matter how good a job your local weekly newspaper or website does of covering your community if you fundamentally don’t care about what’s going on in your community. Thus, in order to succeed, a news organization must foster civic engagement in a way that actually builds an audience for its coverage of governmental meetings, neighborhood events and routine police-blotter news.

Palser is right that community journalism is not a big-money business. It never has been. Two or three generations ago, local newspapers were marginal businesses owned and operated by people who were rooted in the community. We see the same phenomenon today with grassroots news sites, whether they are for-profit, like Baristanet and the Batavian, or non-profit, like the New Haven Independent.

In Eastern Massachusetts, we have an interesting battle under way involving hyperlocal sites operated by the the New York Times Co. ( the Boston Globe’s Your Town), GateHouse Media (Wicked Local) and AOL’s Patch.com. The competition is good for readers and good for job-seeking journalists. Yet I suspect that the ones who are in it for the long haul are those who are passionate about their communities, and are trying to figure out how to transform that passion into a business. A good example of this is the network of sites operated at CentralMassNews.com, which aren’t beautiful, but which are chock full of news and advertising.

Palser’s argument, essentially, is that hyperlocal is not a promising strategy for large media corporations to return to the glory days of yesteryear. I agree. But that’s not what hyperlocal is or should be about. It should be about finding news ways of doing community journalism and making a living.

And though local ownership is not necessarily the key ingredient, I think it’s much more likely that grassroots sites will foster the civic engagement they need to build readership than those operated by large, out-of-state media companies.

Further thoughts from Steve Safran at Lost Remote.

Author Dan KennedyPosted on September 2, 2010Categories MediaTags American Journalism Review, Bartista, Batavian, Boston Globe, civic engagement, GateHouse, hyperlocal, media business, New Haven Independent, New York Times Co., Patch, Wicked Local, Your Town11 Comments on Hyperlocal news and civic engagement

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Follow Ellen Clegg and me at What Works, our website and podcast about the future of local news. Our book, “What Works in Community News,” was published by Beacon Press in January 2024 and has been featured in The New York Times, the Local News Initiative and The Boston Globe.


Media Nation is published under a Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial- Share Alike 4.0 United States License. Some rights reserved. You must attribute this work to Media Nation (with link). For more information, please contact Dan Kennedy at dan dot kennedy at northeastern dot edu.

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