2015
DOI: 10.31269/triplec.v13i2.573
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(De)valuing Intern Labour: Journalism Internship Pay Rates and Collective Representation in Canada

Abstract: Unpaid journalism internships have attracted increasing media coverage, but they have received limited scholarly attention. This paper traces the connections between trade unions (in unionized media organizations) and the labour conditions marking journalism internships. While some unions can be complicit in sustaining the exploitation and devaluation of interns with regard to the standard market value of entry-level labour, other unions have fought to establish internships, locking higher salaries into collec… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…Such critiques provide valuable insights into the overall lack of a gender perspective in investigations of non-Western contexts on the topic of employment precarity in the journalism profession. Moreover, the increasing amount of intern labor is an important aspect of precarity in journalism (e.g., Cohen and de Peuter, 2019;Salamon, 2015). To fill the gap in the literature and to provide an important perspective on analyzing female journalism students' career choices in the current media environment, we formulated the following research question: RQ3: How does the choice of female journalism students not to work in the journalism industry reflect the precarity of journalism in China?…”
Section: Job Precarity In Contemporary Journalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such critiques provide valuable insights into the overall lack of a gender perspective in investigations of non-Western contexts on the topic of employment precarity in the journalism profession. Moreover, the increasing amount of intern labor is an important aspect of precarity in journalism (e.g., Cohen and de Peuter, 2019;Salamon, 2015). To fill the gap in the literature and to provide an important perspective on analyzing female journalism students' career choices in the current media environment, we formulated the following research question: RQ3: How does the choice of female journalism students not to work in the journalism industry reflect the precarity of journalism in China?…”
Section: Job Precarity In Contemporary Journalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the role of unpaid internships in the modern labor market, Perlin (2012) produced seminal work on this topic, which traced their development in the United States and their general acceptance as an established part of the labor market. In fact, much of the research produced to date has focused on the North American experience of internships, where they are most established (e.g., Corrigan, 2015; Discenna, 2016; Frenette, 2015; Salamon, 2015). It is now estimated that 1.3% of those at work in the United States are unpaid interns, and half of all college graduates claim to have completed an unpaid internship (Carnevale & Hansen, 2015, p. 77).…”
Section: Almps and Unpaid Internshipsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By the 1970s, TNG had the greatest impact in negotiations on salaries at small newspapers (Fedler and Taylor, 1981). Some unions have also enshrined in CBAs decent pay rates for journalism interns to counter the rise of low-paid or unpaid internships since the 1990s (Salamon, 2015).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%