Reimagining Campus Media
Attend CUP's first equity reporting workshop where we discuss how to report on key campus issues like anti-Blackness, policing, ableism, trans/gender issues and more.
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Attend CUP's first equity reporting workshop where we discuss how to report on key campus issues like anti-Blackness, policing, ableism, trans/gender issues and more.
is an international symposium to be hosted online this Oct. 22-23 by the Journalism program at Carleton University’s School of Journalism and Communication. We will engage with a global network of experts to examine the nexus between journalism and the COVID-19 pandemic to find lessons for journalism practice and study in the future.
NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ Journalists will be hosting an online Virtual Convention October 23-25. The online event will feature a Career & Community Expo, breakout and plenary sessions, and opportunities to network and connect.
Mean of Creation will be hosting a Zoom call with New York Times writer Taylor Lorenz, a highly talented and respected journalist who covers internet culture and technology at the New York Times.
Denise Balkissoon, Executive Editor of Chatelaine, will be giving the 2020 Atkinson Lecture on Oct. 27 at 11 a.m.
Please join us for “Decolonize THIS (media),” a special talk featuring 2020 UBC Asper Visiting Professor and award-winning journalist, Angela Sterritt and moderated by UBC Associate Professor, Dr. Candis Callison.
So you want to start a nonprofit, independent news organization? Congratulations! Your passion for truth telling and your desire to be your own boss has brought you to this point. Starting a nonprofit enterprise can seem like an overwhelming endeavor. It can be a significant challenge and our monthly one-hour INN Sessions are designed to give you a realistic picture of what the process entails.
Join S. Mitra Kalita, senior vice president for news, opinion and programming for CNN Digital, and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, director of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, in conversation with host Anna Maria Tremonti, also host of the CBC podcast More.
As the results of an unprecedented U.S. election season begin to emerge over the coming days, journalists, politicians and pundits on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border will be trying to make sense of what the future holds for the United States and its neighbours.
The recent BLM movement has intensified the debate in Canada and elsewhere around how the media can better reflect the diversity of the communities it purports to serve. This question necessarily asks not just how news coverage is shaped, but also considers who is doing the shaping.