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    Journalism/Works

    “Journalism/Works” is an ongoing program of the Newseum Institute that focuses on journalism that matters — news reports in print, broadcast and online that produce change, provide insight and that fulfill the “watchdog on government” mission envisioned for a free press in the First Amendment.
    en47 Episodes

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    Episodes (47)

    The Press and the White House

    The Press and the White House

    A conversation with First Amendment expert Mickey Osterreicher, general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, on challenges facing White House press pool photographers and the general state of relations between the Trump White House and the news media. Osterreicher’s comments follow his testimony earlier in the day before a U.S. House subcommittee on these topics.

    Journalism/Works
    enFebruary 14, 2017

    Freedom of Speech: The World View

    Freedom of Speech: The World View

    A conversation with Danish author and journalist Flemming Rose, who says the increasing practice of self-censorship due to terrorism threats is a grave danger to free speech and free press around the globe. In 2005, Rose was editor of Jyllands-Posten newspaper when it published cartoons of Islam’s Prophet Muhammad, which sparked a worldwide controversy still debated today.

    Journalism/Works
    enDecember 02, 2016

    The Law, the Media and Tax Returns

    The Law, the Media and Tax Returns

    A conversation with First Amendment expert and author Ronald K.L. Collins, who joins host Gene Policinski to talk about the legal issues raised by The New York Times’s publication of several pages of Donald Trump’s tax returns. Collins will explain why some experts think a threatened lawsuit by Trump against the newspaper is unlikely to gain traction.

    Journalism/Works
    enOctober 14, 2016

    Asking Big Questions

    Asking Big Questions

    A conversation about how to have better conversations. Host Gene Policinski talks with Josh Feigelson, the founder of the organization Ask Big Questions, which trains college students, faculty and staff on how to engage young adults in thoughtful, civil discussions about complex societal issues. During this political season, the group is offering training centered around eight political questions — not who will win or lose the election, but thought-provoking inquires such as, “What goes into your decision about how you will vote?” and “When was the last time you felt really good about voting?”

    Journalism/Works
    enSeptember 12, 2016

    Protecting journalists – taking it to the United Nations

    Protecting journalists – taking it to the United Nations

    A conversation about a new effort by Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontières) and a coalition of journalism groups and news organizations to ask the United Nations for a Special Representative on journalists’ safety. Host Gene Policinski chats with RSF’s Delphine Halgand and Margaux Ewen about the U.N. initiative, protecting journalists, and the United States’ world rating of 41 (out of 180 nations) on the World Press Freedom Index.

    Journalism/Works
    enSeptember 05, 2016

    Election 2016: Sparking a ‘Murrow Moment’?

    Election 2016: Sparking a ‘Murrow Moment’?

    A conversation about objective journalism and press-candidate confrontations in this year’s presidential election, with Prof. David Mindich, of St. Michael’s College in Vermont, the author of a recent Columbia Journalism Review article, “For journalists covering Trump, a Murrow moment.”

    Journalism/Works
    enJuly 27, 2016

    The news – that isn’t news – from Cleveland and the RNC

    The news – that isn’t news – from Cleveland and the RNC

    Halfway through the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, there have been plenty of protests, inside and outside Quicken Loans Arena. But according to a lawyer who provided First Amendment training in advance to both police and press, concerns about violent confrontations and mass arrests have remained unfulfilled — so far.

    Journalism/Works
    enJuly 20, 2016

    #FREEJASON – Iran continues to imprison Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian

    #FREEJASON – Iran continues to imprison Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian

    Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian has been held in an Iranian prison for more than 500 days on sham charges. Jason’s older brother, Ali Rezaian, speaks with the Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski about international standards of human rights, global efforts to free Jason and the frustration of dealing with what seems – even under Iranian law – a violation of due process.

    Journalism/Works
    enDecember 04, 2015

    Reporting at risk of their lives – every day

    Reporting at risk of their lives – every day

    Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RBSS) is a Syrian citizen journalist group, one of the few independent news sources reporting from inside the Islamic State (ISIS). Newseum Institute COO Gene Policinski spoke with Abdalaziz Alhamza, one of 18 co-founders of the group, and with Courtney Radisch and Sherif Mansour of the Committee to Protect Journalists, about the group’s work. CPJ will present RBSS with its International Press Freedom Award Nov. 24 in New York.

    Alhamza and colleagues live under constant threat of death from ISIS. This interview was conducted Nov. 20 in the Newseum’s Knight Studio, just days after the ISIS attacks in Paris, without an audience for security reasons. Though other members of RBSS were present, only Alhamza was available to speak publicly about his group’s work, out of concern for their personal safety.

    Journalism/Works
    enNovember 24, 2015

    For media, are Paris victims more ‘newsworthy’ than Beirut dead?

    For media, are Paris victims more ‘newsworthy’ than Beirut dead?

    Rem Rieder, USA Today media writer and former editor of American Journalism Review, talks with the Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski about lingering criticism that U.S. and European news media gave saturation news coverage to the Nov. 13 ISIS attacks and deaths in Paris, but much less – if at all – coverage to bombings in Beirut and Nigeria at virtually the same time. Is it cultural insensitivity, valid news judgment, or what some are calling “empathy fatigue”?

    Journalism/Works
    enNovember 20, 2015

    Targeting Corruption in Angola

    Targeting Corruption in Angola

    The Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski talks with Angolan investigative journalist and human rights activist Rafael Marques, recognized with several international awards for his courageous reporting on conflict diamonds and government corruption. He currently heads the anti-corruption watchdog website Maka Angola. This program was recorded before a live studio audience in the Newseum’s Knight TV Studio.

    Journalism/Works
    enSeptember 26, 2015

    Hard to see – but right to publish?

    Hard to see – but right to publish?

    In little more than a week, there was the on-camera “live” killing Aug. 26 of two journalists, Alison Parker and Adam Ward; graphic video taken by Ward and by the apparent shooter; and on Sept. 4, the heart-wrenching photos of three-year old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi, lifeless on a Turkish beach, who drowned trying to escape sectarian violence. Should such images be published? Are there limits, in law or in journalism? Prof. Diana Huffman, who lectures on media ethics and media law at the Phillip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, says at times there is no purpose in publishing – but at other times, there is. A conversation about what we can see – and, perhaps, shouldn’t.

    Journalism/Works
    enSeptember 07, 2015

    What’s in a name? The future – perhaps – for journalism education

    What’s in a name?  The future – perhaps – for journalism education

    From Northwestern University’s venerable Medill School of Journalism to the up-and-coming Middle Tennessee State University mass communications program, a name change is more than cosmetic. It’s recognition that the flow of information – from news to public relations to entertainment to electronic media to marketing – is dramatically different in the 21st century, and that college programs need to adapt, adopt and sometimes rename. It’s now The Medill School of Journalism, Media and Integrated Marketing Communications. This episode features an interview with Ken Paulson, dean of the newly tagged MTSU College of Media and Entertainment.

    Journalism/Works
    enAugust 21, 2015

    Idaho’s “Ag-Gag” Law Runs Afoul of Judge

    Idaho’s “Ag-Gag” Law Runs Afoul of Judge

    Journalism and freedom of information lawyer Kevin Goldberg discusses a federal judge’s decision to toss out Idaho’s so-called “Ag-Gag” law – touted by advocates as a way to protect state agriculture business from “eco-terrorists” but criticized by opponents who believe it would limit press and advocacy group oversight.

    Journalism/Works
    enAugust 07, 2015

    Looks like a drone, flies like a drone – but it’s journalism

    Looks like a drone, flies like a drone – but it’s journalism

    Mickey Osterreicher, general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, talks with host Gene Policinski of the Newseum Institute on the use of these remotely controlled flying devices by news organizations, one day after the first field test by a media consortium in cooperation with the FAA.

    Journalism/Works
    enJune 17, 2015

    A Conversation with Kathy Gannon

    A Conversation with Kathy Gannon

    A conversation with Kathy Gannon, veteran Associated Press correspondent who was shot and seriously wounded in Afghanistan in 2014 in an attack by an Afghan policeman in which her AP colleague, photographer Anja Niedringhaus, was killed. On June 8, 2015, Gannon was the keynote speaker at the annual rededication of the Newseum’s Journalists Memorial.

    Journalism/Works
    enJune 08, 2015

    Reporting from Southeast Asia – Haney Howell, for CBS News

    Reporting from Southeast Asia – Haney Howell, for CBS News

    As the Newseum opens “Reporting Vietnam,” a new exhibit marking the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War, veteran broadcaster Haney Howell – the last CBS News bureau chief in Saigon before the city fell in 1975 – speaks with the Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski about what it was like to report in Vietnam and in neighboring Cambodia. Howell, now journalism professor emeritus at Winthrop University, also discusses the differences, both good and bad, in reporting from today’s global conflict zones.

    Journalism/Works
    enMay 21, 2015

    Lessons from Ferguson: Truth as a ‘tool to improve our democracy’

    Lessons from Ferguson: Truth as a ‘tool to improve our democracy’

    Tony Messenger, editorial page editor at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and a 2015 Pulitzer Prize finalist for editorial writing, talks about what his newspaper and the rest of the news media can take away from news coverage last August of the death of Michael Brown and subsequent protests and violence in Ferguson, Mo., and the reporting of recent protests and violence after the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore.

    Journalism/Works
    enApril 28, 2015

    The importance of “context” in reporting on violence

    The importance of “context” in reporting on violence

    Carl Sessions Stepp, a professor at the University of Maryland’s Phillip Merrill College of Journalism, discusses media coverage of the violence and peaceful demonstrations for social justice in Baltimore, and shares his thoughts on how journalists should prepare in advance for such assignments. The former newspaper reporter and editor has been a consultant for news organizations around the country. He specializes in writing and editing, journalism history, and newsroom organization and change. He has written two books, “Writing as Craft and Magic ” and “Editing for Today's Newsroom,” and is senior contributing editor of American Journalism Review.

    Journalism/Works
    enApril 28, 2015
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