This article scrutinises the usage of the words “we”, “us” and “our” by BBC radio journalists when reporting and discussing news and current affairs. By analysing reports and discussions on the “flagship” Radio 4 Today, a daily news programme whose centrality to political and public debate is widely recognised, the article raises substantive questions about clarity, accuracy and impartiality in senior broadcast journalists’ choice of language. In exploring the assumptions which may underlie the invocation, via such language choices, of an implied community, and against the backdrop of the BBC's commitment to impartiality in its Editorial Guidelines, the article identifies numerous recent examples where the choice of words and identifiers ca...
Tim Hewat was celebrated during his tenure at Granada Television as one of the most influential jour...
Thanks to my mum for spotting my latest appearance on the airwaves. I was on BBC Radio 4’s Analysis ...
Impartiality has been a core principle of public service broadcasting (PSB) in the UK for 100 years....
Balance and impartiality are central principles in journalism, but this study argues their conceptua...
This article reconsiders the concepts of balance and impartiality in journalism, in the context of a...
Drawing on interviews with key stakeholders – regulators, editors, party spin-doctors and politicia...
Drawing on interviews with key stakeholders – regulators, editors, party spin-doctors and politician...
This research explores the popular belief among Americans that broadcasters speak a 'correct' versio...
When did diversity ever equal impartiality? It didn't, but it has become the cover for any kind of '...
Polis Intern and LSE MSc student Pressiana Naydenova reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk f...
There has been greater news industry recognition in recent years that impartiality should not be tra...
Journalistic objectivity sits at the heart of public service broadcasters’ - such as the BBC's - mis...
There have been many complaints that the BBC coverage of the rise of Jeremy Corbyn has been partial ...
Veteran US journalist Howard Weaver writing on the editor’s blog for the American McClatchy newspape...
Is the use of think tanks ideologically balanced in BBC news and current affairs programming? This ...
Tim Hewat was celebrated during his tenure at Granada Television as one of the most influential jour...
Thanks to my mum for spotting my latest appearance on the airwaves. I was on BBC Radio 4’s Analysis ...
Impartiality has been a core principle of public service broadcasting (PSB) in the UK for 100 years....
Balance and impartiality are central principles in journalism, but this study argues their conceptua...
This article reconsiders the concepts of balance and impartiality in journalism, in the context of a...
Drawing on interviews with key stakeholders – regulators, editors, party spin-doctors and politicia...
Drawing on interviews with key stakeholders – regulators, editors, party spin-doctors and politician...
This research explores the popular belief among Americans that broadcasters speak a 'correct' versio...
When did diversity ever equal impartiality? It didn't, but it has become the cover for any kind of '...
Polis Intern and LSE MSc student Pressiana Naydenova reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk f...
There has been greater news industry recognition in recent years that impartiality should not be tra...
Journalistic objectivity sits at the heart of public service broadcasters’ - such as the BBC's - mis...
There have been many complaints that the BBC coverage of the rise of Jeremy Corbyn has been partial ...
Veteran US journalist Howard Weaver writing on the editor’s blog for the American McClatchy newspape...
Is the use of think tanks ideologically balanced in BBC news and current affairs programming? This ...
Tim Hewat was celebrated during his tenure at Granada Television as one of the most influential jour...
Thanks to my mum for spotting my latest appearance on the airwaves. I was on BBC Radio 4’s Analysis ...
Impartiality has been a core principle of public service broadcasting (PSB) in the UK for 100 years....