References
- Ayres, L. 2008. “Thematic Coding and Analysis.” In The SAGE Encyclopedia of Qualitative Research Methods, edited by L. M. Given, 867–868. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage publications.
- Barnes, L. 2016. “Journalism and Everyday Trauma: A Grounded Theory of the Impact from Death-knocks and Court Reporting.” PhD thesis. Auckland University of Technology.
- Bunce, M., K. Wright, and M. Scott. 2018. “‘Our Newsroom in the Cloud’: Slack, Virtual Newsrooms and Journalistic Practice.” New Media & Society 20 (9): 3381–3399.
- Cameron, A. (2020). “Coronavirus and Homeworking in the UK: April 2020.” https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/employmentandemployeetypes/bulletins/coronavirusandhomeworkingintheuk/april2020
- Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development. 2020. “Impact of COVID-19 on Working Lives.” Accessed 20 September 2021. https://www.cipd.co.uk/knowledge/work/trends/goodwork/covid-impact
- Clarke, V., and V. Braun. 2013. Successful Qualitative Research: A Practical Guide for Beginners. London: SAGE.
- Crowley, J. 2020. “Journalism in the Time of Covid.” Accessed 25 May 2021 https://www.johncrowley.org.uk/work-1/entry-03-8c3ap
- Denzin, N. K., and Y. S. Lincoln. 2011. The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research. London: SAGE Publishing.
- Deuze, M., and T. Witschge. 2018. “Beyond Journalism: Theorizing the Transformation of Journalism.” Journalism 19 (2): 165–181.
- Dworznik, G. 2006. “Journalism and Trauma: How Reporters and Photographers Make Sense of What They see.” Journalism Studies 7 (4): 534–553.
- Dworznik-Hoak, G. 2020. “Emotional Labor During Disaster Coverage: Exploring Expectations for Emotional Display.” Journalism Practice. doi:https://doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2020.1816858.
- Fedler, F. 2004. “Insiders’ Stories: Coping with Newsroom Stress: An Historical Perspective.” American Journalism 21 (3): 77–106.
- Feinstein, A., J. Owen, and N. Blair. 2002. “A Hazardous Profession: War, Journalists, and Psychopathology.” American Journal of Psychiatry 159 (9): 1570–1575.
- Gascón, S., R. Fueyo-Díaz, L. Borao, M. P. Leiter, Á Fanlo-Zarazaga, B. Oliván-Blázquez, and A. Aguilar-Latorre. 2021. “Value Conflict, Lack of Rewards, and Sense of Community as Psychosocial Risk Factors of Burnout in Communication Professionals (Press, Radio, and Television).” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18 (2): 365–.
- Goyanes, M., and A. Cañedo. 2021. “The Dark Side of Journalism: Understanding the Phenomenology of Conflicts in the Newsroom and the Mechanisms Intended to Solve Them.” Journalism. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849211014765.
- Hayes, K., and H. Silke. 2019. “Narrowing the Discourse? Growing Precarity in Freelance Journalism and its Effect on the Construction of News Discourse.” Critical Discourse Studies 16 (3): 363–379.
- Hoak, G. 2021. “Covering COVID: Journalists’ Stress and Perceived Organizational Support While Reporting on the Pandemic.” Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 98 (3): 854–874.
- Hochschild, A. 1983. The Managed Heart. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
- Hopper, K. M., and J. E. Huxford. 2015. “Gathering Emotion: Examining Newspaper Journalists’ Engagement in Emotional Labor.” Journal of Media Practice 16 (1): 25–41.
- Hughes, S., L. Iesue, H. F. de Ortega Bárcenas, J. C. Sandoval, and J. C. Lozano. 2021. “Coping with Occupational Stress in Journalism: Professional Identities and Advocacy as Resources.” Journalism Studies 22 (8): 971–991.
- King, N., and C. Horrocks. 2010. Interviews in Qualitative Research. Los Angeles, CA: SAGE.
- Kramp, L., and W. Loosen. 2018. “The Transformation of Journalism: From Changing Newsroom Cultures to a New Communicative Orientation?” In Communicative Figurations, edited by A. Hepp, A. Breiter, and U. Hasebrink, 205–240. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Lawson, M. 2020. “2020 Vision: How Covid News Topped the TV Ratings.” Accessed 2 June 2021. https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2020/dec/23/tv-news-2020-covid-ratings-dominic-cummings
- Lund, S., A. Madgavkar, J. Manyika, and S. Smit. 2020. “What’s Next for Remote Work: An Analysis of 2: 000. Tasks, 800 Jobs, and Nine Countries.” McKinsey Quarterly.
- Maas, D. 2020. “Everyone’s a Health Reporter Now: Covering COVID-19 on Other Beats.” Accessed 17 September 2021. https://ijnet.org/en/story/everyones-health-reporter-now-covering-covid-19-other-beats
- Majid, A. 2021. “One Year Since Lockdown News Industry Survey: Business Confidence Returning but Few Plan Full-time Office Return.” Accessed 25 May 2021. https://www.pressgazette.co.uk/one-year-lockdown-how-pandemic-affected-media-work/
- Maxwell, J. A., and M. Chmiel. 2013. “Notes Toward a Theory of Qualitative Data Analysis.” In The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Data Analysis, edited by U. Flick, 21–34. London: Sage publications.
- Miller, K. C., and S. C. Lewis. 2020. “Journalists, Harassment, and Emotional Labor: The Case of Women in on-air Roles at US Local Television Stations.” Journalism: Theory, Practice, and Criticism. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/1464884919899016.
- Miret, M. 2021. “Journalism has a Health Condition and it is Not COVID.” Accessed 16 September 2021. https://empower-project.eu/empowered-while-working/journalism-has-a-health-condition-and-it-is-not-covid/%0ANews
- Monteiro, S., and A. Marques-Pinto. 2017. “Journalists’ Occupational Stress: A Comparative Study Between Reporting Critical Events and Domestic News.” Spanish Journal of Psychology 20 (34): 1–17.
- Monteiro, S., A. Marques-Pinto, and M. S. Roberto. 2016. “Job Demands, Coping, and Impacts of Occupational Stress among Journalists: A Systematic Review.” European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology 25 (5): 751–772.
- Newman, N. 2020. “Digital News Report.” Oxford.
- Nguyen, M. 2021. “Research Shows Working From Home Doesn’t Work. Here’s How Employers Should Tackle the Problem.” Accessed 30 November 2021. https://time.com/6088110/remote-work-structured-hybrid-research/
- Parry, J., Z. Young, S. Bevan, M. Veliziotis, Y. Baruch, M. Beigi, … C. Tochia. 2021. “Working from Home under COVID-19 lockdown: Transitions and Tensions.” Work after Lockdown.
- Perreault, M. F., and G. P. Perreault. 2021. “Journalists on COVID-19 Journalism: Communication Ecology of Pandemic Reporting.” American Behavioral Scientist 65 (7): 976–991.
- Plesner, U., and E. Raviola. 2016. “Digital Technologies and a Changing Profession: New Management Devices, Practices and Power Relations in News Work.” Journal of Organizational Change Management 29 (7): 1044–1065.
- Posetti, J., E. Bell, and P. Brown. 2020. “Journalism & the Pandemic: A Global Snapshot of Impacts.” Washington, DC.
- Richards, B., and G. Rees. 2011. “The Management of Emotion in British Journalism.” Media, Culture & Society 33 (6): 851–867.
- Selva, M., and A. Feinstein. 2020. “COVID-19 is Hurting Journalists’ Mental Health. News Outlets Should Help Them Now | Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.” Accessed 25 May 2021. https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/risj-review/covid-19-hurting-journalists-mental-health-news-outlets-should-help-them-now
- Šimunjak, M. 2022. Tweeting Brexit: Social Media and the Aftermath of the EU Referendum. London: Routledge.
- Spilsbury, M. 2018. Journalists at Work. Walden: Saffron.
- Thomson, T. J. 2021. “Mapping the Emotional Labor and Work of Visual Journalism.” Journalism 22 (4): 956–973.
- Tobitt, C. 2020. “Four out of Ten Press Gazette Readers say Lockdown Working has Harmed their Mental Health. Accessed 25 May 2021.” https://pressgazette.co.uk/four-out-of-ten-press-gazette-readers-say-lockdown-working-has-harmed-their-mental-health/
- Tobitt, C. 2021. ““Swings and Roundabouts”: What Covid-19 Remote Working has Done to Newsroom Productivity.” Accessed 25 May 2021. https://www.pressgazette.co.uk/what-covid-19-remote-working-has-done-to-newsroom-productivity/
- Wall, M. 2015. “Change the Space, Change the Practice?” Journalism Practice 9 (2): 123–137.
- Worldometers. 2021. “Reported Cases and Deaths by Country or Territory.” Accessed 1 June 2021. https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries.
- Zaman, A. 2013. “Newsroom as Battleground.” Journalism Studies 14 (6): 819–834.