When a deadly listeria outbreak swept across Canada in 2024, the initial headlines focused on recalls and rising case counts.
A self-professed media watchdog has been weaponizing antisemitism and trying to poison journalistic standards on covering Palestine. Media workers on the perils of the relentless intimidation and ...
Trust in journalism is eroding worldwide, with fewer people believing the news they consume. According to the Reuters Digital News Report 2024, only 40 per cent of people globally say they trust “most ...
Book review by Shenaz Kermalli Continue Reading Review of Christopher Cheung’s Under the White Gaze: Solving the Problem of Race and Representation in Canadian Journalism ...
Without systems that allow local news organizations to be transferred, modernized and operated by a new generation of publishers, every conversation about ‘saving local news’ risks becoming little ...
The print sector lost nearly twice that of the broadcast sector—6,000 jobs versus 3,700, according to the Canadian Media Guild's preliminary data. Jan Wong summarizes all the recent cuts, cost-saving ...
Over the past couple of years, I have begun writing more regularly for public audiences – primarily short op-eds based on my research on child development, trauma and youth well-being – to help inform ...
Newsrooms across Canada are figuring out how to use AI, and that leaves journalism educators with a challenge: how to teach students about AI when the industry itself is still working it out. To ...
How post-secondary newsrooms can contribute to local information ecosystems in communities with weakened traditional media presence This literature review investigates the potential of college and ...
When we both started thinking about engaged journalism in the Canadian context, first individually and then together, what we ...
Linda Kay was the first woman sportswriter for the Chicago Tribune, in the 1980s. She considered herself a pioneer at the time. But years later, when she became a professor in Montreal, she began ...
When a journalist learns that a contract has been put on his head, he has two choices: keep quiet or continue. Daniel Renaud chose to continue his investigative work, staying close to the facts, in a ...