This report by Polis intern Barbara Feeney on our Reporting Revolutions panel discussion at the Polis Journalism Conference chaired by Richard Sambrook of Cardiff University with BBC’s Lyse Doucet, Lindsey Hilsum of Channel 4 News (who has a new book, Sandstorm, which tells the story of the Libyan revolt) and Tom Coghlan of The Times
James Rodgers, a former BBC Foreign Correspondent turned “hackademic”, examines governments’ attempt...
Polis Visiting Research Fellow Fatima el Issawi is just back from her first field investigation in T...
When violence first broke out in Tunisia in January 2011, few observers would have predicted that wa...
How are Libya’s journalists coping after the end of the Gaddaffi regime? Polis research fellow Fatim...
It started in Tunisia in December 2010, spread to Egypt in January, Bahrain and Yemen in February - ...
This report by LSE’s Max Hanska-Ahy on his work with Roxanna Shapour on media and the Arab Spring
Reporting war is getting more dangerous, difficult and complicated but working with citizen journali...
The ‘Arab Spring’ has been discussed in the mainstream media as a ‘social media revolution’; a seism...
As a result of the collusion between the media and the current political regime, in Egypt there is a...
The file attached to this record is the authors version. The final publisher's version can be found ...
The 2009 protests in Iran and the 2011 Arab uprisings took place in complex and fast evolving media ...
The early days of the January 25th Revolution received unprecedented international media coverage th...
This thesis focuses on Mohammed Nabbous, a Libyan citizen who produced widely circulated reports dur...
War has come to Polis in the shape of a course I teach at the London College of Communications. Afte...
This is my introductory speech to the seventh Polis annual journalism conference on 21/4/16: Reporti...
James Rodgers, a former BBC Foreign Correspondent turned “hackademic”, examines governments’ attempt...
Polis Visiting Research Fellow Fatima el Issawi is just back from her first field investigation in T...
When violence first broke out in Tunisia in January 2011, few observers would have predicted that wa...
How are Libya’s journalists coping after the end of the Gaddaffi regime? Polis research fellow Fatim...
It started in Tunisia in December 2010, spread to Egypt in January, Bahrain and Yemen in February - ...
This report by LSE’s Max Hanska-Ahy on his work with Roxanna Shapour on media and the Arab Spring
Reporting war is getting more dangerous, difficult and complicated but working with citizen journali...
The ‘Arab Spring’ has been discussed in the mainstream media as a ‘social media revolution’; a seism...
As a result of the collusion between the media and the current political regime, in Egypt there is a...
The file attached to this record is the authors version. The final publisher's version can be found ...
The 2009 protests in Iran and the 2011 Arab uprisings took place in complex and fast evolving media ...
The early days of the January 25th Revolution received unprecedented international media coverage th...
This thesis focuses on Mohammed Nabbous, a Libyan citizen who produced widely circulated reports dur...
War has come to Polis in the shape of a course I teach at the London College of Communications. Afte...
This is my introductory speech to the seventh Polis annual journalism conference on 21/4/16: Reporti...
James Rodgers, a former BBC Foreign Correspondent turned “hackademic”, examines governments’ attempt...
Polis Visiting Research Fellow Fatima el Issawi is just back from her first field investigation in T...
When violence first broke out in Tunisia in January 2011, few observers would have predicted that wa...