November 24, 2020 •
Latest stories, Specialist Journalism •
by Kefa Hamidi and Alexandra Brüchner
Commnications academics create journalism higher education reform roadmap to sustain booming media development in Afghanistan...
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November 16, 2020 •
Press Freedom, Recent, Specialist Journalism •
by Kefa Hamidi
Kefa Hamidi examines the evolution and revolution of the media in Afghanistan and its impact on community cohesion, democracy and social change. ...
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June 22, 2012 •
Digital News •
by Philip Di Salvo
Reminiscing back to 2011 evokes a clear sensation: last year was full of historical events. The Japanese earthquake. Arab Spring. Tahrir Square. Utoya Island massacre. The year 2011 was significant due to what many observers saw as the...
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January 27, 2012 •
Digital News •
by Fabio Forin
*Article courtesy of the European Journalism Centre Is immersive storytelling the next big step in conflict reporting? “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough,” the influential war photographer Robert Capa...
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August 31, 2011 •
Ethics and Quality •
by Philip Di Salvo
After twenty years spent in exile with his family in Australia, Saad Mohseni, son of an Afghan diplomat, returned to Afghanistan as the Taliban regime collapsed in 2002. He is now defined by the international media as “The Murdoch...
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August 15, 2010 •
Ethics and Quality •
by Marcello Foa
Reflections on Wikileaks’ Afghan War Diary. Swaying the media is much easier than academics and reporters are willing to admit. Knowing that 80 percent of the news comes from institutional sources, the transparency of information...
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January 14, 2010 •
Specialist Journalism •
by Stephan Russ-Mohl
Concerning the fight against terrorism, here’s a bit of hypothetical food for thought: What would’ve happened if the media “adequately” covered the failed suicide attack in the skies over Detroit? Perhaps a short paragraph or...
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