Columbia Journalism Review
Five decades after Kerner Report, representation remains an issue in media
[Commentary] In February of 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson’s National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders issued the Kerner Report—which detailed an extensive and daunting list of inequalities and inequities that led to civil unrest in Detroit, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Newark. Among its findings, the commission highlighted how the lack of adequate representation among the people assigning, reporting, and editing media coverage might drive “the underlying problems of race relations.”
Muck: A Build Tool for Data Journalists (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Wed, 02/28/2018 - 10:51The media today: Facing a sea of crises, President Trump sticks to media safe spaces (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Mon, 02/26/2018 - 09:41Op-Ed: In the era of fake news, where have all the fact-checkers gone? (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Fri, 02/23/2018 - 12:25RIP Facebook Live: As subsidies end, so does publisher participation (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Fri, 02/23/2018 - 11:25Illustration: When fake news and bots took over our lives (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Wed, 02/21/2018 - 11:59Duels and death matches: A catalog of press threats in the US reflects a long, violent history (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Wed, 02/21/2018 - 11:59The dangers of the paper route: Newspaper carriers are being assaulted and killed across the country (Columbia Journalism Review)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Wed, 02/21/2018 - 11:58Threat Tracker
[Commentary] At the beginning of 2017, the US Press Freedom Tracker started cataloguing every violation of press freedom that took place on American soil, be it through violence, arrest, denial of access, or other threats. This is a selection of those incidents from 2017.