Farewell to Fleet Street
Fleet Street, the London thoroughfare synonymous with 300 years of journalism in Britain, bids farewell to its last international newsroom on Sunday.
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Make the climate debate accessible
Journalists can share scientific knowledge with a larger audience.
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'To be a journalist in Russia is suicide'
As the trial of three men accused of murdering Anna Politkovskaya continues, Luke Harding reports from Moscow on one editor's fight for life.
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The conceit of good journalism
Percy Zvomuya speaks to an African journalist who has made a substantial contribution to the profession.
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Can African journalists construct citizen-centric communications?
High on the Highway Africa agenda will be debates on how to deepen the democratisation role of the media.
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The power of anonymity
The idea is that reporters need to be cautious about accepting what people tell them and should always look for evidence to corroborate statements.
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Celebrating a century of journalism
The Christian Science Monitor celebrates 100 years as a newspaper at its stall on the Cape Town Book Fair.
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A scribe's balancing act
Heribert Adam reflects on anti-apartheid journalism and how "multipliers of liberal opinion" such as journalist Gerald Shaw can inform and educate.
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Forging the media's new guard
Weekly Mail recruits were poverty stricken, persecuted and despised, writes Anton Harber, but those who stayed afloat are now shaping the news.
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'I remember them when ...'
"Interns came from all walks of life, with their own histories, bringing different life experiences to the courses, holding conflicting ideologies."
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