Like a lot of people I objected to the treatment of David Miranda at the hands of the UK security officials and I was worried by the pressure put on The Guardian, as related by editor Alan Rusbridger. But I am not so sure about the Orwellian conspiracy/victim framing of the narrative by some on the open Internet side of things
Edward Snowden. Chelsea Manning. Espionage and government secrets. Wikileaks and Julian Assange. In ...
We had our first POLIS public debate on Friday with Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the BBC’s David Loyn and Sk...
I am rushing to finish a book on the significance of WikiLeaks and the emergence of more networked p...
Since terrorism is now perceived as a primary and pervasive threat to state security, many states ha...
The threat of terrorism and the increasing power of terrorist groups have prompted a rapid growth of...
This article is by LSE researcher and PhD student Ruth Garland How should the citizen respond to the...
[extract] Freedom of information and governmental transparency require champions. Lawyers and even s...
The Guardian’s David Leigh is possibly Britain’s leading investigative reporter, as his success over...
This paper takes a critical approach to the Guardian’s coverage and the British secret state’s posit...
A routine layover at London’s Heathrow Airport could become the driving force behind changing a coun...
Wikileaks is now at the centre of a global battle between media and those in power but what’s the va...
Polis Intern Jessica Di Paolo (@JessDiPaolo) reports on a gathering of investigative journalism at t...
Last month, MI5 Director General Andrew Parker appeared on BBC Radio 4 to make the case for intellig...
A paradigmatic shift is sometimes revealed by an unanticipated and extraordinary event, and so it wa...
The United Kingdom’s Leveson Inquiry has been the hottest free show in town since it began taking ev...
Edward Snowden. Chelsea Manning. Espionage and government secrets. Wikileaks and Julian Assange. In ...
We had our first POLIS public debate on Friday with Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the BBC’s David Loyn and Sk...
I am rushing to finish a book on the significance of WikiLeaks and the emergence of more networked p...
Since terrorism is now perceived as a primary and pervasive threat to state security, many states ha...
The threat of terrorism and the increasing power of terrorist groups have prompted a rapid growth of...
This article is by LSE researcher and PhD student Ruth Garland How should the citizen respond to the...
[extract] Freedom of information and governmental transparency require champions. Lawyers and even s...
The Guardian’s David Leigh is possibly Britain’s leading investigative reporter, as his success over...
This paper takes a critical approach to the Guardian’s coverage and the British secret state’s posit...
A routine layover at London’s Heathrow Airport could become the driving force behind changing a coun...
Wikileaks is now at the centre of a global battle between media and those in power but what’s the va...
Polis Intern Jessica Di Paolo (@JessDiPaolo) reports on a gathering of investigative journalism at t...
Last month, MI5 Director General Andrew Parker appeared on BBC Radio 4 to make the case for intellig...
A paradigmatic shift is sometimes revealed by an unanticipated and extraordinary event, and so it wa...
The United Kingdom’s Leveson Inquiry has been the hottest free show in town since it began taking ev...
Edward Snowden. Chelsea Manning. Espionage and government secrets. Wikileaks and Julian Assange. In ...
We had our first POLIS public debate on Friday with Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the BBC’s David Loyn and Sk...
I am rushing to finish a book on the significance of WikiLeaks and the emergence of more networked p...