nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
Avoiding a state of solitude: Keeping local news going is not just about nostalgia but about keeping an eye on local institutions
|
Jolley, Rachael |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 1-3 |
artikel |
2 |
Banned laughter: This feature asks two writers about lessons for today from their Slovak families’ experiences 50 years ago
|
Sherwood, Miriam |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 73-75 |
artikel |
3 |
Banning controversial speech won’t solve the issues: A kneejerk reaction to social media by government is in danger of creating bad laws that restrict free expression
|
Ginsberg, Jodie |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 62-63 |
artikel |
4 |
Cover up: Kuwaiti writer Layla AlAmmar discusses why 4,000 books were banned in her home country and the possible fate of her first #MeToo novel
|
Bailey, Charlotte |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 80-82 |
artikel |
5 |
Culture
|
|
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 86-87 |
artikel |
6 |
Dearth of news: Some local newspapers in China no longer dig into corruption or give a voice to local people as Communist Party scrutiny increases
|
Kan, Karoline |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 48-50 |
artikel |
7 |
Eight innovative ways of reporting local news: How different organisations are responding to the global decline of community newspapers
|
|
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 18-19 |
artikel |
8 |
Fakebusters strike back: How to spot deep fakes, the manipulated videos that are the newest form of “fake news” to hit the internet
|
Joseph, Raymond |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 76-79 |
artikel |
9 |
Fifty years after 1969: what next? This feature asks two writers about lessons for today from their Slovak families’ experiences 50 years ago
|
Abrahám, Samuel |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 71-73 |
artikel |
10 |
Fighting for funding: UK newspapers editors talk about the pressures on local newspapers in Britain today
|
Sands, Peter |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 42-44 |
artikel |
11 |
Ghost writers: The author and China expert imagines a fictional futuristic lecture he’s going to give in 2049, the centenary of Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four
|
Wasserstrom, Jeffrey |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 94-98 |
artikel |
12 |
India shifts local: People are hungry for local news, but badly paid journalists are tempted by bribes
|
Chatterjee, Rituparna |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 51-53 |
artikel |
13 |
In Focus
|
|
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 64-65 |
artikel |
14 |
Making local neighbourhoods great again: In Spain hyperlocal newspapers are all the rage because they involve readers
|
Nortes, Silvia |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 60-61 |
artikel |
15 |
News loses: Thousands of US communities have lost their daily papers. What is the cost to their area?
|
Fox, Jan |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 20-22 |
artikel |
16 |
“People feel too small to be heard”: Columnist Libby Purves tells Index fewer working class voices are being heard and wonders whether this contributed to Brexit
|
Jolley, Rachael |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 40-41 |
artikel |
17 |
Press freedom: EU blind spot? Many European countries are violating freedom of the press; why is the EU not taking it more seriously?
|
Gimson, Sally |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 110-112 |
artikel |
18 |
Protesting through poetry: Verses by one of Romania’s most renowned poets draw on his experience of anti-corruption protests in Sibiu
|
Vancu, Radu |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 100-105 |
artikel |
19 |
Public interest news is suffering: A British MP says it is dangerous when local newspapers no longer hold public bodies to account
|
Whittingdale, John |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 46-47 |
artikel |
20 |
Remote controller: What happens when all major media, state and private, is controlled by Hungary’s government and all the front pages start looking the same
|
Nolan, Dan |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 54-56 |
artikel |
21 |
Rocky times: Local Australian newspapers are merging, closing and losing circulation which leaves scandals unreported
|
O’Shea, Monica |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 57-59 |
artikel |
22 |
Shooting the messengers: An overview of Index’s latest published work including three reports on media freedom
|
Jennings, Lewis |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 106-108 |
artikel |
23 |
Silence speaks volumes: Tanzanian artists and musicians are facing government censorship in a country where 64 new restrictions have just been introduced
|
Komba, Neema |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 83-85 |
artikel |
24 |
Slip sliding away: Well-known journalists reflect on their early careers in local journalism and warn about its decline today
|
Morton, Andrew |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 32-35 |
artikel |
25 |
Special Feature: After the Purge
|
|
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 70 |
artikel |
26 |
Special Report
|
|
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 6-7 |
artikel |
27 |
Special Report: Inside Local News Today
|
|
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 28-29 |
artikel |
28 |
Standing up for freedom: A look at Gdańsk’s history of protest and liberalism, as the city fights back after the murder of mayor Paweł Adamowicz
|
Reichardt, Adam |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 68-69 |
artikel |
29 |
Staying alive: Reporter Sandro Ruotolo reveals how local news reporters in southern Italy are threatened by the Mafia
|
Battaglia, Laura Silvia |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 45 |
artikel |
30 |
Stripsearch: On the death of local news
|
Rowson, Martin |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 26-27 |
artikel |
31 |
Switched off: After years as a political football, Argentinian papers are closing as people turn to the internet for news
|
Caselli, Irene |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 14-17 |
artikel |
32 |
Terrorising the truth: Journalists on the US border are too intimidated by drug cartels to report what is happening
|
Woodman, Stephen |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 11-13 |
artikel |
33 |
The future is robotic: Would journalists have more time to investigate news stories if robots did the easy bits?
|
Frary, Mark |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 8-10 |
artikel |
34 |
2019: the year of the troll? This extract from the novel Troll describes a world where the government controls the people by spewing out hate 24 hours a day
|
Hvorecký, Michal |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 88-93 |
artikel |
35 |
Turks retreat online for news: Turkish journalists are using social media to get their stories out
|
Genç, Kaya |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 23-25 |
artikel |
36 |
Turning off the searchlights: The Italian government attempts to restrict coverage of the plight of refugees crossing the Mediterranean
|
Perrone, Alessio |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 66-67 |
artikel |
37 |
What happens when our local news disappears? How UK local newspapers are closing and coverage of court proceedings is not happening
|
Bagshaw, Tracey |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 29-31 |
artikel |
38 |
Who will do the difficult stories now? British local newspaper editors fear a future where powerful fi gures are not held to account, plus a poll of public opinion on journalism
|
Jolley, Rachael |
|
2019 |
48 |
1 |
p. 36-39 |
artikel |