Efforts are being made to address the issue of media plurality at both the UK and European level. Concerns about excessive concentration of media ownership rose to the surface in the aftermath of the hacking scandal, and Leveson’s recommendations for reforming plurality rules propelled the issue up the political agenda
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
Des Freedman of Goldsmiths, University of London responds to the Media Plurality Report published to...
Political parties may be in stalemate over the underpinnings for a new self-regulator for the press,...
The House of Lords Communications Committee has begun its inquiry into media plurality. This is sign...
Chris Dawes, an industry veteran and Senior Visiting Fellow at the LSE, analyses the Government’s re...
Setting up a judge-led inquiry into press standards had a number of advantages when compared to prev...
We’ve briefly come back from our summer recess (until August 18) to share this response from Steven ...
Speaking for the annual Charles Wheeler Lecture on Journalism at Westminster University, Shadow Cult...
The Leveson Inquiry debated media plurality in the UK, and the implication of concentrated media pow...
Among a number of other issues raised in Index on Censorships recent report on the EU and freedom of...
On 17 May the House of Lords Communications Committee published the evidence it received in its cons...
The Council and the Commission of the European Union have so far steered clear of initiating new reg...
The Leveson Report recommended Parliament review existing law on media ownership and media plurality...
Signing off the LSE Media Policy Blog for the holidays, LSE Fellow Sally Broughton Micova, who has b...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
Des Freedman of Goldsmiths, University of London responds to the Media Plurality Report published to...
Political parties may be in stalemate over the underpinnings for a new self-regulator for the press,...
The House of Lords Communications Committee has begun its inquiry into media plurality. This is sign...
Chris Dawes, an industry veteran and Senior Visiting Fellow at the LSE, analyses the Government’s re...
Setting up a judge-led inquiry into press standards had a number of advantages when compared to prev...
We’ve briefly come back from our summer recess (until August 18) to share this response from Steven ...
Speaking for the annual Charles Wheeler Lecture on Journalism at Westminster University, Shadow Cult...
The Leveson Inquiry debated media plurality in the UK, and the implication of concentrated media pow...
Among a number of other issues raised in Index on Censorships recent report on the EU and freedom of...
On 17 May the House of Lords Communications Committee published the evidence it received in its cons...
The Council and the Commission of the European Union have so far steered clear of initiating new reg...
The Leveson Report recommended Parliament review existing law on media ownership and media plurality...
Signing off the LSE Media Policy Blog for the holidays, LSE Fellow Sally Broughton Micova, who has b...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
In the next post in our Media Plurality Series curated together with the Media Power and Plurality P...
Des Freedman of Goldsmiths, University of London responds to the Media Plurality Report published to...
Political parties may be in stalemate over the underpinnings for a new self-regulator for the press,...