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Year / 2017

  • Patti Sonntag and Robert Cribb will co-teach a new course on hard investigative skills at the Banff Centre this fall. Image courtesy of Marcia O'Connor/CC BY-NC 2.0.

    Banff Centre to offer inaugural investigative journalism course this fall

    By H.G. Watson, Managing Editor Last fall, when Patti Sonntag was invited to an event at the Banff Centre, an arts and culture school nestled in the picturesque Alberta Rockies, she looked around and had a brainwave — she thought there should be investigative trainings there. And now, there will be. In late May, the Banff…
  • media_on_the_move_final.jpg

    Media on the Move: June 8 to June 21

    [<a href="//storify.com/jsource/media-on-the-move-june-8-to-june-21" target="_blank">View the story "Media on the Move: June 8 to June 21" on Storify</a>]
  • screen_shot_2017-06-21_at_10.45.02_am.png

    Research shows that local news reporters are working harder than ever – and they’re loving it

    By Gregory Furgala for the Local News Conference Across the United States, reporters and editors at local newspapers are working longer hours, in smaller newsrooms and with fewer opportunities for advancement. They’re also optimistic about the future of local news, and their futures in it, a recent study in the Columbia Journalism Review has found.…

  • Abacus data poll released on June 16 finds that 86 per cent of Canadians feel they would get the news even if their local newspaper went out of business. Image courtesy of Abacus Data.

    New poll finds Canadians still think they’ll get the news even if their local newspaper disappears

    By H.G. Watson, Managing Editor Canadians don’t seem too worried about our troubled local media landscape — at least according to a new poll released last Friday. In a survey released on June 16, Abacus Data, a Canadian polling and market research firm, found that 86 per cent of Canadians feel they would still get…
  • Steven Zhou, Chelby Marie Daigle, Ishmael Daro and Naheed Mustafa speak on June 4 panel moderated by Amira Elghawaby. Photo courtesy of Angela Long.

    Muslim communities are telling new stories to break old stereotypes, say panelists

    By Angela Long for the Local News Conference If you want to learn about the Muslim community, don’t read the news, says the associate editor of The Islamic Monthly.   Steven Zhou, who converted to Islam six years ago, said writing about a community takes time and resources. As a result, too many publications produce “surface-level” stories fulfilling…

  • Normally a summer policy, now there will be no Monday editions of the National Post indefinitely.

    Postmedia axes Monday print edition of the National Post

    By H.G. Watson, Managing Editor You have just one more week to pick up a Monday print edition of the National Post — and then it is gone for good. On June 19, Postmedia announced that it is eliminating the Monday print edition of the national paper, and replacing it with an online ePaper. The…
  • c7db8glwcaaylsj.jpg

    Globe and Mail Public Editor: Overuse of term ‘populism’ can be misleading

    By Sylvia Stead, Globe and Mail Public Editor Here’s a word that has surged in popularity in the last year. It has been used to describe Donald Trump’s ascendancy, the majority vote on Brexit and the second-place showing of Marine Le Pen in this month’s French presidential election. I’ve seen business articles in The Globe…
  • Asmaa Malik, Catherine Wallace, Tyler Nagel and Gavin Adamson discuss source diversity at June conference. Photo courtesy of Abby Plener.

    Researchers urge journalists to examine who gets quoted in news stories

    By Abby Plener for the Local News Conference While the value of different sources can be subjective, newsrooms have a responsibility to interrogate their choices surrounding which voices get the most coverage, researchers agreed at a recent conference on local news. Asmaa Malik, assistant professor at the Ryerson School of Journalism, emphasized that in a fast-paced newsroom,…
  • Photo courtesy Caresse Ley.

    Trudeau rejects call for five per cent tax on broadband Internet services

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is swiftly shooting down a parliamentary committee’s recommendation that Ottawa impose a five per cent tax on broadband Internet.

  • Lenny Carpenter, Wawmeesh Hamilton, Maureen Googoo and Michael Dick at the Ryerson School of Journalism June 4. Photo courtesy of Abby Plener.

    Listening to community members essential, say Indigenous journalists sharing industry experiences at local news conference

    By Abby Plener for the Local News Conference While working in community news, Wawmeesh Hamilton heard a story from a reporter at a rival paper that he found concerning. The journalist told him that their publisher said that First Nations stories did not warrant enough interest to earn a spot on the front page. Hamilton recalls being…

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