Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
Un pódcast de Oxford University
321 Episodo
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How to improve climate change coverage. Ideas from three reporters around the world
Publicado: 27/7/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 7: Which journalists do people pay most attention to and why?
Publicado: 25/7/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 6: Have news audiences become more polarised over time?
Publicado: 18/7/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 5: Perceptions of media coverage of the war in Ukraine
Publicado: 8/7/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 4: The role of email news in engagement and monetisation
Publicado: 4/7/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 3: How people access climate change news
Publicado: 27/6/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 2: The news habits of younger audiences
Publicado: 20/6/2022 -
Digital News Report 2022. Episode 1: What you need to know
Publicado: 13/6/2022 -
Why class still matters in UK newsrooms
Publicado: 25/5/2022 -
From COVID to cancer to GM crops: helping journalists understand science
Publicado: 9/5/2022 -
World Press Freedom Day from Chile to Kenya: why institutions and innovation matter
Publicado: 29/4/2022 -
What should we expect for journalism in 2022?
Publicado: 17/1/2022 -
How 2021 changed journalism
Publicado: 17/12/2021 -
Why are women experts missing from the news media in Ghana?
Publicado: 15/11/2021 -
How synergies can build a better culture across news organisations
Publicado: 22/10/2021 -
What's the point of opinion journalism in the digital age?
Publicado: 11/10/2021 -
How journalists can better cover the climate crisis
Publicado: 27/9/2021 -
Digital News Report 2021. Episode 6. Impartiality unpacked: a study of four countries
Publicado: 21/7/2021 -
Digital News Report 2021. Episode 5. How do people think about the financing of the commercial news media?
Publicado: 19/7/2021 -
Digital News Report 2021. Episode 4: Local news unbundled: where audience value still lies
Publicado: 12/7/2021
The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism is Oxford University's international research centre in the comparative study of news media.