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The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011) C.W. Anderson College of Staten Island (CUNY) Social Science History Association November 19, 2011 Boston, MA
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The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Dec 04, 2014

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“What reporters know and don’t report is news– not from the newspaper point of view, but from the sociologists and novelists.” (Lincoln Steffens, 1931)
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Page 1: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

C.W. Anderson College of Staten Island (CUNY)

Social Science History Association November 19, 2011

Boston, MA

Page 2: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

“What reporters know and don’t report is still news– not from the

newspaper point of view, but from the sociologists and

novelists.” (Lincoln Steffens, 1931)

Page 3: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

How Are Practices of Empirical Social Research Changing in the

Digital Era?• Journalism as an “odd

form” of empirical social research

• Digitization • New Forms of

Journalistic Evidence

Page 4: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Three “Generations” of Journalism

• Media and the Survey Movement

• Precision Journalism • “Algorithmic”

Journalism

Page 5: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

What Was the Pittsburgh Survey?

• A pioneering social-science study of urban conditions in Pittsburgh (1907-1908).

• Funded by the Russell Sage Foundation.

• One aspect of the larger “survey movement,” one cornerstone of Progressive Era reform efforts.

• Relation to later sociology?• Relation to journalism?

Page 6: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

An Uneasy Hybrid

• “From the perspective of almost a century, it is possible to see the Pittsburgh Survey as an amalgam of three different strands of social research.” (Anderson and Greenwald, 1996)

Page 7: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Relation to Earlier and Later Sociology?

• Survey was part of sociology’s roots in social reform.

• Most important jurisdictional conflict in professional history of field is between sociology and social work (not journalism).

• Mania for documentation & publicity, but limited statistical rigor or analysis.

Page 8: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Relation to Earlier and Later Sociology?

• Story told is usually an institutional history (ex: Turner 1996).

– Survey movement rested on a conception of “social manager” as “social engineer.”

– Success would come from --> A combination of power and publicity.

– Survey movement failed in its practical goals.

– And it failed to impact sociology methodologically.

Page 9: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Professionalization (1920’s)

• Sociology• Social Work• Policy and Planning• Journalism

Page 10: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

From the perspective of institutional history, then, the

overlapping relationship between journalism, sociology, and

reform found in the Pittsburgh Survey was glancing and

indirect.

Page 11: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Beyond Institutional History: Empirical Technique and Objects

of Evidence

• Survey’s relation to journalism?

• Survey’s “mania for comprehensiveness.”

• Rise of the magazine and conceptions of journalistic deadlines.

• Lack of statistical analysis versus the “rise of the variable.”

Page 12: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Fifty Years Later …

• Philip Myer and the rise of “computer assisted reporting.” • Precision Journalism (1973)• “Meyer’s book, which sought to define new forms of journalistic

work based on statistical data analysis, became a leading reference point for individuals involved in the computer-assisted reporting movement.” (Powers 2011)

Page 13: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Beyond CAR: Big Data and “Algorithmic” Journalism

• Algorithms: A predetermined set of instructions for solving a specific problem in a limited number of steps.

• Hybrids: Made up of both– Human intentionality /

social structure AND

– Technological affordances

Page 14: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Research (Historical)• Methodological discourse around empirical techniques• Comparison: Park and Giddings. Two journalists who

became sociologists:– their methodological attitudes towards the survey.– their attitudes toward “higher journalism.”

• Comparison: local newspaper coverage of the survey vs. other forms of survey publicity (magazines, etc).

• Comparison: Institutional discourse within professional journals.– How did Editor and Publisher talk about sociology– How did the American Journal of Sociology talk about journalism

Page 15: The Long History of Data Journalism (1907-2011)

Research (Social Science)• An institutional analysis of the Computer-Assisted

Reporting (CAR) community – its relation to “precision journalism.”

• Ethnographic analysis of big data journalism projects.– PANDA Project– Overview Project