The promise of the transparency culture. A comparative study of access to public data in Spanish and Swedish newsrooms
Keywords: 
Data journalism
Freedom of information act
Media systems
Public data
Transparency
Issue Date: 
2018
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Project: 
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/Proyectos de I+D+I dentro del Programa Estatal Retos de la Sociedad (2015)/CSO2015-64662-C4-1/ES/USOS Y PREFERENCIAS INFORMATIVAS EN EL NUEVO MAPA DE MEDIOS EN ESPAÑA: AUDIENCIAS, EMPRESAS, CONTENIDOS Y GESTION DE LA REPUTACION EN UN ENTORNO MULTIPANTALLA
ISSN: 
1751-2786
Note: 
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way
Citation: 
Appelgren, E. (Ester); Salaverría-Aliaga, R. (Ramón). "The promise of the transparency culture. A comparative study of access to public data in Spanish and Swedish newsrooms". Journalism practice. 12 (8), 2018, 986 - 996
Abstract
In 2013, with the introduction of the Transparency Law in Spain, a number of Spanish newsrooms started working with data journalism methods. In Sweden, which has one of the oldest Freedom of Information acts in the world, newsrooms invested in the skill development of data journalism at approximately the same time. Because previous research suggests that access to public data has been one of the key driving forces for the development of data journalism worldwide, it is important to understand how legislation is actually shaping the practice of data journalism. Based on a survey of 66 key informants in Spain and Sweden and ten in-depth interviews with data journalists from five media companies in each country, we conducted a comparative study, building on the frameworks of media systems to explore data journalism practices in these two countries. The differences found indicate that the national and EU legislation in both nations shape journalistic strategies for accessing data, turning journalists at times into activists fighting for the right to access public data. Beyond the law, data journalists advocate for a transparency culture among the civil servants, in order to secure public accountability.

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