Podcasts about joan shorenstein fellow

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Best podcasts about joan shorenstein fellow

Latest podcast episodes about joan shorenstein fellow

BookPeople Podcast
Sarah Smarsh

BookPeople Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2019 49:31


A repost of author Sarah Smarsh live at BookPeople Bookstore in Austin, Tx September 2018 Sarah Smarsh has written about socioeconomic class, politics, and public policy for the Guardian, the New York Times, the Texas Observer, Pacific Standard, the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, and many other publications. A recent Joan Shorenstein Fellow at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and a former professor of nonfiction writing, Smarsh is a frequent speaker on economic inequality and media narratives relating this topic. She lives in Kansas. Heartland is her first book.

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Claes de Vreese: Political Journalism in a Populist Age

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2017 13:41


A conversation with Claes H. de Vreese, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (fall 2017) and Professor and Chair of Political Communication at the University of Amsterdam, about his new research paper on political journalism in a populist age. The paper, can be read in full at: https://shorensteincenter.org/political-journalism-populist-age/ In the paper, de Vreese provides an overview of the types and causes of populist movements. He offers 10 tips for how journalists can best cover them. Using scholarly research on populist communication around the globe as a starting point, de Vreese provides guidance to help journalists think about issues such as how much coverage a candidate warrants, covering policy over communication style, and the importance of historical and comparative context.

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Derrick Z. Jackson: Environmental Justice? Unjust Coverage of the Flint Water Crisis

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2017 18:59


A conversation with Derrick Z. Jackson, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (fall 2016), Boston Globe essayist, and a climate and energy writer for the Union of Concerned Scientists, about his new research paper examining the failure of national media outlets to respond to the Flint water crisis in an urgent manner, as well as biases in coverage.  Jackson asks what catastrophes might have been averted had national media outlets stepped in sooner—and why it took so long for the Flint water crisis to become a story worthy of national attention. He points to a lack of newsroom diversity, a history of national media paying little attention to environmental justice in communities of color, and the tendency to act only after harm has been verified by doctors and scientists—rather than in response to widespread citizen concern.   Full paper: https://shorensteincenter.org/environmental-justice-unjust-coverage-of-the-flint-water-crisis/

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Zack Exley: The Alt-Right on YouTube

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2017 16:40


A conversation with Zack Exley, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (spring 2017), organizer and author, about his new research paper which dives into a little-known part of the alt-right media landscape, revealing its influence and worldview. In the paper, which can be read in full at shorensteincenter.org, Exley writes that political channels on YouTube are currently dominated by the right wing. Although often overlooked by mainstream society, these channels receive millions of views, espousing recycled National Socialist and white nationalist ideologies with a modern twist. The alt-right uses these channels to build influence and spread its ideas among its audience, much as right-wing talk radio has for decades. Exley examines the content of one of these channels, "Black Pigeon Speaks," uncovering the worldview put forth by the channel’s host.    Full paper: https://shorensteincenter.org/anatomy-of-alt-right-youtuber

alt right national socialists exley black pigeon speaks joan shorenstein fellow
Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Yeganeh Rezaian: How Women Journalists Are Silenced in a Man's World: The Double-Edged Sword of Reporting from Muslim Countries

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2017 11:39


Yeganeh Rezaian, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (fall 2016) and Iranian journalist, talks about her new paper, "How Women Journalists Are Silenced in a Man's World: The Double-Edged Sword of Reporting from Muslim Countries," available to read in full at shorensteincenter.org. The paper shines a light on the difficulties women reporters face while working in Muslim countries, as well as the importance of the stories they tell. Rezaian, who formerly worked for Bloomberg News and The National, was imprisoned in Tehran along with her husband Jason Rezaian of The Washington Post. She shares her own stories of being silenced and harassed, as well as those of other women reporters. In addition to imprisonment, women journalists in Muslim countries can experience online harassment and blackmail, defamation of character, unwanted advances in exchange for access, and the expectation to ask softball questions of officials, among other problems. Despite these challenges, women reporters continue to work to tell important stories in the region. Rezaian’s access as a woman has allowed her to cover topics that a newsroom may otherwise ignore, or that a man could not cover in a conservative religious setting. Rezaian writes that now that she is free from the restrictions of the Islamic Republic, she has a responsibility to her fellow journalists—who may not have the freedom to speak out—to raise awareness of these issues.  Full paper: https://shorensteincenter.org/women-journalists-muslim-countries-yeganeh-rezaian/

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Helen Boaden: In Search of Unbiased Reporting in Light of Brexit, Trump and Other Challenges

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2017 20:26


A conversation with Helen Boaden, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (spring 2017) and former BBC News and BBC Radio director, about her new research paper comparing the BBC’s value of impartiality to the American value of objectivity in journalism, and the pressures placed on both in their respective environments. Boaden explains how although the BBC receives funding from a license fee and is not subject to the commercial pressures that American news outlets face, political pressures can still affect its survival and independence. Beyond money and politics, the nature of the modern news cycle can subvert journalists’ values. The full paper, which can be read at shorensteincenter.org, reviews election coverage in the US, touches on the BBC’s coverage during the Brexit referendum, and looks at the challenges arising from the spread of disinformation and fake news.  Full paper: https://shorensteincenter.org/unbiased-reporting-brexit-trump-uk

PolicyCast
163 Diversity in the Newsroom

PolicyCast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2017 29:10


Farai Chideya has covered every presidential election since 1996, but after last year’s raucous campaign, she wondered how how political campaign coverage is influenced by the gender and racial makeup of our political press. This spring she joined the Shorenstein Center as a Joan Shorenstein Fellow to take a closer look at the question, but was surprised by the number of newsrooms that were deeply reluctant to engage on the subject.

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Farai Chideya and Zack Exley: Understanding the Electorate

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2017 60:57


Farai Chideya, Joan Shorenstein Fellow and senior writer at FiveThirtyEight, and Zack Exley, Joan Shorenstein Fellow and senior advisor to Bernie Sanders’ campaign, discussed the role of race and class in the 2016 presidential election. This Shorenstein Center Speaker Series event was recorded March 7, 2017, at Harvard Kennedy School. 

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Helen Boaden and Ann Marie Lipinski: Media in the Age of Trump and Brexit

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017 56:47


Helen Boaden, spring 2017 Joan Shorenstein Fellow and director of BBC Radio, and Ann Marie Lipinski, curator for the Nieman Foundation for Journalism, discussed the role of the press and social media in the Brexit referendum and the US presidential election. This Herbert C. Kelman Seminar on International Conflict Analysis and Resolution was recorded February 27, 2017, at Harvard University.   

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
2016 Theodore H. White Seminar on Press and Politics featuring: Bob Schieffer, Nancy Kaffer, Michael Tomasky and Derrick Jackson

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2016 91:49


A panel discussion about the 2016 election and news coverage featuring: Bob Schieffer, Walter Shorenstein Media and Democracy Fellow, political contributor to CBS News, and former moderator of “Face the Nation”; Nancy Kaffer, columnist for Detroit Free Press and winner of the 2016 David Nyhan Prize for Political Journalism; Derrick Z. Jackson, Joan Shorenstein Fellow and Boston Globe essayist; and Michael Tomasky, special correspondent for The Daily Beast. Moderated by Nicco Mele, director, Shorenstein Center, and recorded on November 16, 2016, at Harvard Kennedy School. 

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Tim Wu: The Battle for Our Attention

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2016 64:04


Tim Wu, author of The Master Switch and professor at Columbia Law School, discussed his new book, The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble to Get Inside Our Heads, during a conversation at the Shorenstein Center with Erie Meyer, Joan Shorenstein Fellow. Wu, whose past work also includes the FTC, Google, and Free Press, discussed the historical origins of the attention economy, how people are fighting back against the encroachment of advertising, and considerations for media and technology companies. This Shorenstein Center Speaker Series event was recorded on October 25, 2016, at Harvard Kennedy School.   

Bob Schieffer's
The Bezos Effect: Dan Kennedy and the Future of Newspapers

Bob Schieffer's "About the News" with H. Andrew Schwartz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2016


In this episode, we talk to Media Nation blogging guru Dan Kennedy about the future of newspapers and the technology that is changing the media landscape. Kennedy, a professor at Northeastern University’s School of Journalism and author of “The Wired City: Reimagining Journalism and Civic Life in the Post-Newspaper Age,” discusses his often cited analysis of how the Washington Post is being run by its new owner Jeff Bezos and how the paper has been transformed into a model media and technology company. Dan and Bob Schieffer first met last spring at the Harvard Kennedy School, where Kennedy was a Joan Shorenstein Fellow and Bob was the Walter Shorenstein Media and Democracy Fellow. Kennedy is currently working on book project called “The Return of the Moguls,” which will be about the Post under Bezos, the Boston Globe under Red Sox principal owner John Henry, and the Orange County Register under entrepreneur Aaron Kushner, to be published by ForeEdge in 2017. Kennedy is a frequent contributor to Harvard’s Nieman Journalism Lab, a project that attempts to help journalism figure out its future in an Internet age.  Download transcript here.

PolicyCast
Female Journalists in the Middle East

PolicyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2016 23:29


Iranian journalist Yeganeh Rezaian, a Fall 2016 Joan Shorenstein Fellow at the Shorenstein Center, discusses the challenges she faced as a reporter in her home country, and describes the common thread that joins her experience with that of journalists, especially women, across the Middle East. She then offers advice to young reporters interested in reporting from the region.

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Johanna Dunaway: Mobile vs. Computer - Implications for News Audiences and Outlets

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2016 12:45


Johanna Dunaway, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (spring 2016) and associate professor of communication at Texas A&M University, examines how mobile technology – despite expanding internet access – is also contributing to a digital divide in news consumption. You can read Johanna Dunaway's full research paper on the topic by visiting shorensteincenter.org and clicking on 'Research'. 

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Joanna Jolly: Rape Culture in India - The Role of the English-Language Press

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2016 14:03


Joanna Jolly, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (spring 2016) and BBC South Asia editor, introduces her new research paper examining the increased coverage of rape in India’s English-language newspapers following the infamous 2012 gang rape in Delhi, and whether this coverage led to policy changes. * Listeners are advised this podcast contains discussion of sexual assault. 

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Paul Wood: The Pen and the Sword – Reporting ISIS

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2016 13:51


Paul Wood, Fall 2015 Joan Shorenstein Fellow and BBC world affairs correspondent, discusses his new research paper, "The Pen and the Sword: Reporting ISIS". The paper, which can be read in full at shorensteincenter.org, tells the harrowing story of a journalist held hostage by ISIS, and examines the ethical dilemmas that arise when reporting on terrorist organizations. 

fall bbc sword reporting paul wood joan shorenstein fellow
Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Dan Kennedy: The Bezos Effect - How Amazon’s Founder Is Reinventing The Washington Post

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2016 17:30


Dan Kennedy, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (spring 2016) and associate professor in the School of Journalism at Northeastern University, discusses his new research paper providing insight into The Washington Post’s digital strategy and business model following its acquisition by Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos. 

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Marilyn Thompson: Can Taxpayer Money Save Presidential Campaigns?

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2016 10:40


Marilyn Thompson, a Spring 2016 Joan Shorenstein Fellow and former deputy editor at POLITICO, discusses her new research paper exploring the Presidential Election Campaign Fund, and whether the fund could still provide a viable way to address citizen frustration with the campaign finance system.

PolicyCast
Billionaires and their Newspapers

PolicyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2016 26:30


Northeastern Professor Dan Kennedy, a spring 2016 Joan Shorenstein Fellow at the Kennedy School’s Shorenstein Center, describes the fates of three newspapers, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe and the Orange County Register, that were bought in recent years by individuals with significant financial means but little background in journalism. He explains the differing approaches each paper has taken to find a sustainable business model, discusses how the models have impacted the quality of reporting, and interprets what other news organizations might learn from their examples.

PolicyCast
Does All Reporting on Sexual Violence Influence Culture in a Positive Way?

PolicyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2016 27:33


BBC Reporter Joanna Jolly, currently a Joan Shorenstein Fellow at the Shorenstein Center, discusses her research into the aftermath of the infamous Delhi gang rape in 2012. She describes the various ways in which news outlets covered the story and how they influenced the Indian society’s response. *Warning: this episode includes graphic language and violent subjects.*

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
Marie Sanz: The New York Times' Editorials and the Normalization of U.S. Ties with Cuba

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2015 13:08


Marie Sanz, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (fall 2015) and senior correspondent for Agence France Presse, introduces her new research paper examining The New York Times' editorials on U.S.-Cuba relations over the past five decades, and the role of the press in the restoration of relations between the two countries. Since 1961, The New York Times editorial board consistently opposed the break in U.S.-Cuba relations, and used major historical events such as the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Mariel boatlift, and the Elian Gonzalez standoff to argue for the restoration of relations. Sanz also covers Fidel Castro’s relationship with the media, how U.S. public opinion toward Cuba changed over time, and the secret talks between the U.S. and Cuba that led to the announcement that relations would be normalized on December 17, 2014. Sanz's full paper can be read at shorensteincenter.org.

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast
David Ensor: Exporting the First Amendment

Shorenstein Center Media and Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2015 14:36


David Ensor, Joan Shorenstein Fellow (fall 2015) and former director of Voice of America (VOA), introduces his new research paper making the case for strengthening VOA in order to grow U.S. soft power through the production and spread of journalism. VOA’s news programming, which is funded by the U.S. government but remains editorially independent, reaches almost 188 million people in more than 45 languages through a variety of platforms. Building upon Joseph Nye’s concept of soft power, Ensor argues that VOA is one of the U.S.’s most valuable national security assets, and as such, needs more resources than it currently receives. Ensor's full paper can be read at shorensteincenter.org. 

PolicyCast
VOA: Exporting the First Amendment

PolicyCast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2015 26:48


David Ensor, former director of Voice of America and current Fall 2015 Joan Shorenstein Fellow at the Shorenstein Center, explains why Voice Of America is a key instrument in the projection of US soft power and how the organization’s commitment to objective journalism, as opposed to being an advocate for US policies, is vital to its success.