In this podcast, Walter Merricks, Chairman of Impress - which bills itself as “the first truly independent press regulator in the UK” - outlines the aim of his organisation to become a trusted and recognised brand in ethical journalism, following the Leveson Inquiry which investigated the phone hacking scandal in November 2012.  
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
The United Kingdom’s Leveson Inquiry has been the hottest free show in town since it began taking ev...
The Press Regulation Panel has this week recognised Impress as a post-Leveson Inquiry ...
Hackgate is the biggest scandal to engulf the mainstream press in decades. What started as a small b...
As a result of the phone-hacking scandal and evidence of other serious journalistic abuses by some n...
In the coming weeks the new press regulator IPSO will unveil its board and officially launch. We can...
Channel 4 News reports on the Irish regulatory system which includes a statutory elemen
The Coulson-Brooks verdicts and the trial itself will be treated by the blinkered, screeching anti-L...
Reports emerged yesterday that the News of the World allegedly hired a private investigator to hack ...
On Monday, 4 July 2011, the Guardian first revealed that an investigator working for Britain’s (then...
The ‘feral beasts’ of the Westminster press corps are quite rightly chasing the political fall-out o...
As part of British Politics and Policy at LSE’s new series of articles on Reforming the press (after...
The Leveson Inquiry is carrying out the most extensive investigation into the practice and ethics of...
The aim of this article is to review the work of the official inquiry committee headed by Lord Justi...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
The United Kingdom’s Leveson Inquiry has been the hottest free show in town since it began taking ev...
The Press Regulation Panel has this week recognised Impress as a post-Leveson Inquiry ...
Hackgate is the biggest scandal to engulf the mainstream press in decades. What started as a small b...
As a result of the phone-hacking scandal and evidence of other serious journalistic abuses by some n...
In the coming weeks the new press regulator IPSO will unveil its board and officially launch. We can...
Channel 4 News reports on the Irish regulatory system which includes a statutory elemen
The Coulson-Brooks verdicts and the trial itself will be treated by the blinkered, screeching anti-L...
Reports emerged yesterday that the News of the World allegedly hired a private investigator to hack ...
On Monday, 4 July 2011, the Guardian first revealed that an investigator working for Britain’s (then...
The ‘feral beasts’ of the Westminster press corps are quite rightly chasing the political fall-out o...
As part of British Politics and Policy at LSE’s new series of articles on Reforming the press (after...
The Leveson Inquiry is carrying out the most extensive investigation into the practice and ethics of...
The aim of this article is to review the work of the official inquiry committee headed by Lord Justi...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
A government consultation on press regulation which asked for views on whether to commence Section 4...
The United Kingdom’s Leveson Inquiry has been the hottest free show in town since it began taking ev...