The Media Select Committee report on its phone-hacking investigation is tougher than I expected and very pointed. It is difficult to see why anyone would think well of the Murdochs as media proprietors after reading it. Tom Watson’s typically determined bid to push his colleagues into agreeing the ‘not fit’ line may be more than a piece of rhetoric
In the wake of the News International phone hacking scandal, many have called for further regulation...
I don’t often make calls on big controversial decisions because I think my job is to observe and ana...
Transnational media corporations now wield enormous power and influence. Never has this been display...
[This was my instant response to the hearings – a good analysis is provided by the man who has done ...
In 2009 David Cameron, the Leader of the British Conservative Party, then in opposition, announced t...
The reciprocal closeness in the relationship between journalism and power is a prominent feature of ...
The public service broadcasting battle in Britain is about much more than the regulation of TV. It i...
David Cameron’s closeness to the News International elite and his hiring of Andy Coulson have posed ...
Long-standing proposals to update media ownership policies need to be implemented, particularly in r...
With all the excitement about Julian Assange it’s easy to forget that another hugely divisive figure...
As part of British Politics and Policy at LSE’s new series of articles on Reforming the press (after...
Creating spectacle in whatever form sells copy, but it also greatly increases visibility. Politician...
The ‘feral beasts’ of the Westminster press corps are quite rightly chasing the political fall-out o...
Reports emerged yesterday that the News of the World allegedly hired a private investigator to hack ...
In 2014, Nick Davies, the investigative journalist responsible for uncovering the News of the World ...
In the wake of the News International phone hacking scandal, many have called for further regulation...
I don’t often make calls on big controversial decisions because I think my job is to observe and ana...
Transnational media corporations now wield enormous power and influence. Never has this been display...
[This was my instant response to the hearings – a good analysis is provided by the man who has done ...
In 2009 David Cameron, the Leader of the British Conservative Party, then in opposition, announced t...
The reciprocal closeness in the relationship between journalism and power is a prominent feature of ...
The public service broadcasting battle in Britain is about much more than the regulation of TV. It i...
David Cameron’s closeness to the News International elite and his hiring of Andy Coulson have posed ...
Long-standing proposals to update media ownership policies need to be implemented, particularly in r...
With all the excitement about Julian Assange it’s easy to forget that another hugely divisive figure...
As part of British Politics and Policy at LSE’s new series of articles on Reforming the press (after...
Creating spectacle in whatever form sells copy, but it also greatly increases visibility. Politician...
The ‘feral beasts’ of the Westminster press corps are quite rightly chasing the political fall-out o...
Reports emerged yesterday that the News of the World allegedly hired a private investigator to hack ...
In 2014, Nick Davies, the investigative journalist responsible for uncovering the News of the World ...
In the wake of the News International phone hacking scandal, many have called for further regulation...
I don’t often make calls on big controversial decisions because I think my job is to observe and ana...
Transnational media corporations now wield enormous power and influence. Never has this been display...