Healing journalism, one beat at a time
Wouldn’t it be grand if health journalism became the healthiest trend-setter for the whole family of journalism?
Wouldn’t it be grand if health journalism became the healthiest trend-setter for the whole family of journalism?
Scores of journalists staged a silent picket outside Parliament’s main gates at lunchtime on Wednesday.
President Jacob Zuma has requested a report from the SAPS on an incident between his protection unit and a reporter, his office said on Wednesday.
Different media — print, radio, television and the internet — offer different possibilities and attractions
Fleet Street, the London thoroughfare synonymous with 300 years of journalism in Britain, bids farewell to its last international newsroom on Sunday.
Journalists can share scientific knowledge with a larger audience.
Percy Zvomuya speaks to an African journalist who has made a substantial contribution to the profession.
As the trial of three men accused of murdering Anna Politkovskaya continues, Luke Harding reports from Moscow on one editor’s fight for life.
High on the Highway Africa agenda will be debates on how to deepen the democratisation role of the media.
The idea is that reporters need to be cautious about accepting what people tell them and should always look for evidence to corroborate statements.
The Christian Science Monitor celebrates 100 years as a newspaper at its stall on the Cape Town Book Fair.
Heribert Adam reflects on anti-apartheid journalism and how ”multipliers of liberal opinion” such as journalist Gerald Shaw can inform and educate.
<i>Weekly Mail</i> recruits were poverty stricken, persecuted and despised, writes Anton Harber, but those who stayed afloat are now shaping the news.
"Interns came from all walks of life, with their own histories, bringing different life experiences to the courses, holding conflicting ideologies."