Polis Intern and LSE MSc student Pressiana Naydenova reports on the latest Polis Media Agenda Talk featuring Liliane Landor Controller, Languages, BBC Global News “…language is never innocent” (Roland Barthes) Liliane Landor thinks this is “an extraordinary time to be a journalist” and that “those who tell stories rule the world”, which makes it important to have as many voices as possible involved in the narrative. But how in a major international news organisation like the BBC do you balance serving a global audience with a local one
This article scrutinises the usage of the words “we”, “us” and “our” by BBC radio journalists when r...
By LSE MsC student Diska Putri Pamungkas on a Polis talk from Liz Mermin, Director of Visual at the ...
This was weird. I was in a hot sticky tent pitched on a car park in West London next to the M40 with...
This is the text of the speech given by Peter Horrocks, the BBC’s Director of Global News, as the PO...
When the riots kicked off here in Athens a couple of months ago, I learned a lot from the newspaper ...
The promise of international journalism lies in being multimedia and multilingual, BBC Global News d...
This article provides a critical assessment of the popular notion that we are moving towards an incr...
What do you need to learn to be a journalist in a world where everyone can be a news producer? No-on...
This is an edited version of an essay by Polis Summer School student Victoria Yates. The idea of glo...
For a global elite who care about the big international issues such as climate change, economic regu...
I was lucky enough to spend today with some outstanding journalism educators from around the world a...
The London School of Economics and Political Science where my think-tank POLIS is based is an elite ...
Much has been written about transnational public spheres, though our understanding of their shape an...
Here are some draft notes for a paper I am writing on how people in the UK use the news media in an ...
We do not have much empirical evidence to support the vision of the global village in the sphere of ...
This article scrutinises the usage of the words “we”, “us” and “our” by BBC radio journalists when r...
By LSE MsC student Diska Putri Pamungkas on a Polis talk from Liz Mermin, Director of Visual at the ...
This was weird. I was in a hot sticky tent pitched on a car park in West London next to the M40 with...
This is the text of the speech given by Peter Horrocks, the BBC’s Director of Global News, as the PO...
When the riots kicked off here in Athens a couple of months ago, I learned a lot from the newspaper ...
The promise of international journalism lies in being multimedia and multilingual, BBC Global News d...
This article provides a critical assessment of the popular notion that we are moving towards an incr...
What do you need to learn to be a journalist in a world where everyone can be a news producer? No-on...
This is an edited version of an essay by Polis Summer School student Victoria Yates. The idea of glo...
For a global elite who care about the big international issues such as climate change, economic regu...
I was lucky enough to spend today with some outstanding journalism educators from around the world a...
The London School of Economics and Political Science where my think-tank POLIS is based is an elite ...
Much has been written about transnational public spheres, though our understanding of their shape an...
Here are some draft notes for a paper I am writing on how people in the UK use the news media in an ...
We do not have much empirical evidence to support the vision of the global village in the sphere of ...
This article scrutinises the usage of the words “we”, “us” and “our” by BBC radio journalists when r...
By LSE MsC student Diska Putri Pamungkas on a Polis talk from Liz Mermin, Director of Visual at the ...
This was weird. I was in a hot sticky tent pitched on a car park in West London next to the M40 with...