A generation of ‘new media’ sites is challenging traditional news organisations when it comes to reporting the environment.
The inquiry needed to put a sticking plaster on the problem, but instead used a ‘bloody great cast’.
The protection of confidential journalistic sources in public life is vital. We must not lose it.
New Leveson-compliant watchdog will provide firm hand for newspaper industry.
Why the Editors’ Code of Practice needs to be reformed.
Look back centuries ago and you’ll find the same obsessive secrecy, and the same justifications, as seen today.
The horrors of war in tweets and hashtags.
The Labour Party leader faces a hostile press, but needs a better media strategy.
As the news sinks in, a lot of people who voted to Leave are having second thoughts. Many of them journalists.
Most of Fleet Street had worked hard for a Leave vote, but it still took even eurosceptic papers by surprise.
It was the press that swayed opinion towards joining the common market in 1975. Since then though, the editorial mood has been rather different.
When you take into account the weight of circulation, most readers are getting the Brexit message.
There is a stronger public interest in privacy than in revealing salacious showbiz title-tattle, no matter what the papers say.
Four years after Leveson a survey has found that a surprising number of journalists are still confused about ethical standards.
It was a newspaper for people who don’t like newspapers. And not enough people liked it.
British public is the least well-informed of any EU country when it comes to Europe.
This has been cross-border journalism at its best. But for some papers it’s a chance to pursue a different agenda entirely.
Public opinion has been polarised by the way newspapers are covering this story.
It looks as if the proposals laid down by the Leveson Inquiry will come to nothing.
State regulation and punitive libel laws are no way to ensure a fair and free press.