Sentences with phrase «legal journalism at»

The article, Legal Journalism at a Crossroads is thought - provoking, and I encourage you to have a look.

Not exact matches

At a time when proponents of free speech should be defending Steyn, the Columbia Journalism Review can be found smack in the middle of Mann's legal suit as a friend of the court, calling Steyn's comments «deplorable, if not unlawful...»
I know this might be hard to believe, but there are some people out there whose thirst for legal knowledge is not completely slaked by the hard - hitting investigative journalism we crank out here at LBW.
The blog Legal As She Is Spoke, a project of the Program in Law and Journalism at New York Law School, takes its title from that 19th Century classic.
I was intrigued to read yesterday about a new project launched by Mike Sacks, a third - year law student at Georgetown who describes himself as «interested in legal journalism and the intersection of law and politics.»
He decided to try journalism, and found a job at a small legal paper in Seattle.
Most of my legal career has been spent with at least one foot in legal publishing, media and journalism.
The Justice Reporter [PDF] is a fairly new online publication that focuses on issues affecting journalism and the law, conceived and edited by Tracey Tyler, legal affairs reporter at the Toronto Star, and Tony Wong, a litigation partner at Blakes specializing in media law.
«I'd rather be doing journalism than commenting on it,» explains Obbie, who left his job as executive editor of The American Lawyer to teach journalism at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and run its Carnegie Legal Reporting Program.
Obbie is the former executive editor of The American Lawyer magazine; former author of the now - defunct, award - winning blog LawBeat, where he dissected journalism focused on the justice system, lawyers and the law; and former director of the Carnegie Legal Reporting Program at Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.
I have been in legal journalism for more than 10 years, but I am very excited to begin a new phase in my career at the helm of Canadian Lawyer.
A graduate of New York University's law school, she is the director of program in Law and Journalism and professor of legal writing at New York Law School and an avid patron of the arts.
Students in New York Law School's Program in Law and Journalism look at legal stories in the mainstream news media, evaluate the reporting, and probe further, questioning facts and statements in the coverage that someone who hasn't studied law might take at face value.
Before joining Legal Week she worked at several business titles, starting her journalism career at Euromoney.
We shouldn't underestimate the tremendous capacity for powerful journalism that the legal community collectively wields — we know more, and are better at circulating that knowledge, than we think.
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