By
James on
September 28th, 2007
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The UK’s national newspapers have always been ferociously competitive in print throughout the country. But now they are ferociously competitive on the Internet globally. But can they make money from that global brand?
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The NUJ chapel at the Coventry Telegraph are balloting for strike action in a stand against inadequate editorial staffing levels.
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edia institutions in South Asia lack training facilities and modern equipment, which have impeded them in highlighting social issues of the region, reporters said at a seminar organised by the Press Institute of Pakistan.
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Jose Manuel Diokno gave a lecture on legal concerns in investigative journalism during a four-day training on investigative journalism conducted by the PCIJ to Luzon-based reporters and editors.
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Blogs, online video and social networking: this seems to be the extent of the political parties’ dabbling with new media. This has culminated in a Ming Campbell blog, Conservative ppolicy discussions on YouTube and Labour’s “MPURL” system.
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And as new media and free elections have spread across the planet, the votes business has been subject to the unstoppable logic of globalisation.
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“The media, commentators and public have all given Gordon Brown the benefit of the doubt simply because he is not Tony Blair.”
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The new weekly Bath Chronicle has got off to a flying start with stores across the city selling out. Our newspaper sales team has been frenetically busy topping up supplies of the first-ever weekly edition of the paper.
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A Russian-language IWPR conflict reporting training manual has been distributed to around 500 media organisations and journalism faculties at universities across Central Asia.
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Journalism of verification in the blogosphere has been displaced by a journalism of assertion where rumors become facts and where facts are censored by omission.
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