Assessing Physical and Digital News Spaces: Placemaking in Global South Journalism
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2026
Abstract
Homepages and front pages are both important places in the news production world. And yet, we know little about how these differ in contexts beyond Western Europe and the United States. This study contributes a field theory-based assessment of the differences in news content and presentation between the homepage and front page of the Daily Monitor, an influential Ugandan newspaper. Using a qualitative analysis of PDFs taken from 27 days in April, May, and June 2020 (N = 143), during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, we find that the two places differ across dimensions of topic, tone, and location. The results show that the Daily Monitor’s online and physical spaces occupy different places in the journalism field. The physical front page space marks out the newspaper’s place as a locally oriented and civically invested opposition voice, while the virtual space of the homepage signals the newspaper’s place as a cosmopolitan, globally oriented news organization. Our findings suggest that Global South news organizations have robust, thoughtful approaches to their online presences and that news organizations can use different content spaces to engage in placemaking and stake out multiple field positions.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Journalism Practice
First Page
165
Last Page
187
Recommended Citation
Moon, R., Boukouvidis, T., & Ramirez, F. (2026). Assessing Physical and Digital News Spaces: Placemaking in Global South Journalism. Journalism Practice, 20 (1), 165-187. https://doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2024.2326521