"In contrast to its industry relevance, journalism innovations remain significantly uncharted research territory. This outstanding volume addresses this gap, for the first time on an international comparative scale. It offers fundamental groundwork, rigorous empirical findings, and aids journalism‘s transformation, making it a valuable recommendation for both research and industry professionals."Dr. Christopher Buschow, Professor of Digital Journalism, Hamburg Media School and Hamburg University of Technology, Germany"The pace and extent of innovation in journalism is breathtaking. This volume explores these profound changes and how they will shape the future of European journalism. With a comparative analysis spanning five nations, it examines the evolving socio-political landscapes, the impact of technological advancements on funding and formats, and critical areas of innovation such as AI, collaborative investigations, data journalism, fact-checking, and podcasting, as well as how journalistic organizations are adapting to these shifts, from new funding models to structural reconfigurations. If you're a scholar, student, or practising journalist striving to grasp the gritty reality of European journalism's recent evolution, this book is essential reading."Professor Lucy Kueng, Senior Visiting Research Associate, Reuters Institue, Oxford University, UK"A compact, profound and up-to-date overview of research on key questions of journalism. The volume shows in an excellent way what science can do for journalistic practice: It discusses innovative ways in which journalism can overcome its crisis."Christoph Neuberger, Chair und Professor of Communication, Freie Universität Berlin, Director of Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society, Berlin, Germany"Nothing like an innovative book to study innovation. Researchers interested in media transformation processes, as well as editors, news managers, and media executives should read this outstanding volume that provides a deep insight into the nature, conceptualization, and implications of journalistic innovation for news organizations. From a thorough revision of previous scholarly research in the field, a hundred interviews with international experts and an empirical analysis of media outlets in five European countries, this collective work addresses key issues to understand why innovation becomes crucial to help media outlets better adapt themselves to the ongoing changes in audience behaviour, business, and technology in the current news ecosystem."Jose Luis Rojas Torrijos, Assistant Professor of Journalism, School of Communication, University of Seville, Spain"An important and impressively detailed contribution to advancing both practical knowledge and theoretical conceptualization of the ongoing transformations in journalism. Drawing on a rich data set that encompasses 100 case studies in five Western European nations, the authors systematically explore a wide range of significant journalistic innovations and their relevance to democratic society." Jane B. Singer, Professor Emerita in Journalism; City, University of London