Search for: "Brian McCann" Results 21 - 40 of 88
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
21 Oct 2011, 4:00 am by INFORRM
Brian Cathcart is professor of journalism at Kingston University and former media columnist at the New Statesman. [read post]
21 Jun 2011, 8:51 am by Josh Wright
Daniel Kahnemann and co-authors discuss, in the most recent issue of the Harvard Business Review (HT: Brian McCann), various strategies for debiasing individual decisions that impact firm performance. [read post]
15 Dec 2011, 9:37 am by INFORRM
Brian Cathcart teaches journalism at Kingston University and is a founder of Hacked Off. [read post]
3 Nov 2011, 12:45 pm by INFORRM
Brian Cathcart teaches journalism at Kingston University London and is a founder of Hacked Off. [read post]
22 Feb 2012, 6:13 am by INFORRM
” For years, editors have been telling us that every outrage was a one-off: from Gordon Kaye, Princess Diana, Barry George, Russell Harty and Colin Stagg in the past to Robert Murat, the McCanns, the Dowlers, Sienna Miller and Christopher Jefferies more recently. [read post]
16 Jan 2012, 4:11 pm by INFORRM
For years, the former chair, Sir Christopher Meyer, brushed aside much of the criticism, whether of the PCC’s conduct in the McCann case, or of its response to phone hacking, or of its complaints work. [read post]
30 Apr 2012, 5:31 pm by INFORRM
Brian Cathcart teaches journalism at Kingston University London and is a founder of Hacked Off. [read post]
14 Jul 2012, 1:08 am by INFORRM
Brian Cathcart teaches journalism at Kingston University London and is a founder of Hacked Off. [read post]
1 Jul 2012, 3:30 am by INFORRM
And the evidence of the Dowler family and the evidence of the McCann family is incredibly powerful in that regard. [read post]
23 Jul 2012, 2:10 pm by Howard Wasserman
Thanks to Mike, Gregg Polsky (UNC), and Brian Galle (BC) for their comments. [read post]
23 Jul 2012, 2:04 pm by Howard Wasserman
Thanks to Mike, Gregg Polsky (UNC), and Brian Galle (BC) for their comments. [read post]
25 Jul 2018, 4:34 pm by INFORRM
Despite phone hacking, data theft, bribery, McCann, Jefferies, the Shoreham air crash, the Manchester Arena bomb and others, and despite their having raised two fingers to the Leveson Report and resumed their shifty business as usual, some editors seem convinced that the public might be persuaded to allow them to be the arbiters of what information is in the public interest and what is not. [read post]
9 Jan 2017, 4:13 pm by INFORRM
’ As Sir Brian Leveson observed upon the publication of his report, no one could call these arrangements “state” or “statutory” regulation. [read post]
18 Jun 2012, 5:48 pm by INFORRM
Brian Cathcart is a founder of Hacked Off and teaches journalism at Kingston University London. [read post]
11 Aug 2017, 4:02 pm by INFORRM
Any rational attempt to understand public distrust of mainstream news media must take account of the catalogue of infamous ethical failures and illegal activities by large parts of the national press over a generation, ranging from the Hillsborough affair and the treatment of Diana, Princess of Wales, through the Motorman scandal involving industrial-scale theft of private data to the McCann, Murat and Jefferies affairs, in which national newspapers recklessly and cruelly printed hundreds… [read post]
5 Apr 2015, 4:19 pm by INFORRM
Otherwise the risk greatly increases that, for want of democratic political will, we expose thousands more British citizens to the kind of treatment dished out to people like the McCanns, Christopher Jefferies and the victims of hacking and blagging. [read post]
9 Jan 2017, 6:53 am by INFORRM
Sir Brian Leveson made clear in his report that effective, independent self-regulation of the press in line with his recommendations is the best way of underpinning standards and so the best way of protecting the public against abuses of all kinds, including those proscribed by law. [read post]
12 Aug 2014, 5:05 pm by INFORRM
 The Royal Charter offers journalism the chance to draw a line under recent scandals and win back public trust – but IPSO does not The overwhelming majority of decent journalists did not hack phones, bribe police officers, steal private data or libel the McCanns and Christopher Jefferies, but they are tainted by association just as people have been in other industries and institutions affected by grave wrongdoing. [read post]