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Media Challenges in Developing Countries: Understanding the Rise of Alternative Digital Platforms Over Mainstream Journalism

Journal: International Journal of English, Literature and Social Science (Vol.11, No. 1)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 129-135

Keywords : digital journalism; alternative media; developing countries; algorithmic governance; editorial judgment; platform capitalism; media trust; Bangladesh; artificial intelligence; citizen journalism;

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Abstract

The article is dedicated to the analysis of structural transformations of journalism in developing countries under conditions of platform dominance and algorithmic governance. The relevance of the study is determined by the accelerated displacement of mainstream journalism by alternative digital platforms in media systems characterized by political pressure, economic fragility, and technological asymmetry. The scientific novelty of the work lies in the integrated examination of algorithmic, economic, legal, and sociocultural factors shaping this displacement within the context of Bangladesh. The article describes the uneven adoption of artificial intelligence tools in newsrooms, the erosion of editorial authority under metric-driven decision-making, and the growing reliance of audiences on non-institutional information actors. Special attention is paid to the interaction between platform algorithms and state regulatory mechanisms that jointly constrain professional journalism while enabling alternative digital actors. The study sets itself the goal of identifying the mechanisms through which editorial judgment is subordinated to algorithmic optimization in developing media environments. To achieve this goal, qualitative source analysis, comparative analysis, and structural interpretation were employed. The conclusions outline the implications of these transformations for media trust, journalistic autonomy, and the sustainability of public discourse. The article will be useful for researchers in media studies, journalism, digital communication, and political communication. The originality of this study resides in its integrated analytical framework that jointly examines algorithmic governance, state regulation, and newsroom economic dependency through an empirically grounded analysis of a developing-country media system, rather than treating these dynamics as separate domains.

Last modified: 2026-01-30 13:48:15