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Published in: openDemocracyUK: OpinionLabour must not abandon media reform
In an open letter to Labour leadership candidates, prominent figures in the party call for continued support for...
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Published in: openDemocracyUK: OpinionStop blaming ordinary people for the UK’s pandemic failures
Boris Johnson has presided over a public policy disaster. Now, he wants you to blame your neighbours. Don't.
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?#Clapforcarers: why grassroots solidarity against Coronavirus matters
As people see that we all depend for our safety on the state and its health system, they realise that contra...
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Published in: 50.50Job: US Investigations Editor
Seeking: A highly experienced US-based investigative journalist, to lead our project tracking the backlash against...
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Published in: ourBeeb: OpinionCoronavirus has strengthened the case for the BBC
The right has been desperate to sell of the BBC for years. But Covid-19 shows why we need public service broadcasting.
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?Taking deliberation seriously: ‘considered judgment’ from the Brexit referendum to the pandemic
On the 2019 UK elections, popular sovereignty, and citizens’ assemblies. A conversation with Stuart White.
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Published in: openMovementsVirus: all that is solid melts in the air
Is it easier to ascertain the truthfulness and quality of a society’s institutions under normal daily circumstances...
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?Women refugee photographers who changed how post-war Britain saw itself
These images served to signal that there was also a cultural dimension to the hopes for post-war renewal.
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Published in: Countering the Radical RightCoronavirus and the radical right: conspiracy, disinformation, and xenophobia
How is the radical right using the COVID-19 pandemic to advance their political agenda?
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Published in: North Africa, West Asia‘Bots’ and bans: social media and regime propaganda in the Middle East
Regimes in the Middle East are constantly evolving their propaganda strategies to keep up with the new forms of...
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Published in: North Africa, West AsiaHow do Syrian directors see censorship today?
Towards a new understanding of censorship, and its impact on Syrian cinema.
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Published in: ourEconomy: OpinionHow to make AI work for people and planet
Whether AI will be a weapon of social injustice or an agent of positive change depends on the stories we choose to weave.
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Published in: North Africa, West AsiaA matter of life or death: Syrian journalists have nowhere to turn
In Syria, journalists report the news while facing threats from all sides of the war. Now we must do our part to...
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Published in: ourBeeb: OpinionWe don’t need a public broadcaster – we need several
The BBC is struggling to serve a polarised audience. Is ending its monopoly the answer?
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?The great fear of coronavirus: Panic! in the supermarket
Most of the commentary on coronavirus tends to overlook the fact that a response to a crisis doesn't necessarily...
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Published in: ourEconomy: OpinionIn a new world order driven by AI, we need to rewrite the rules of data capitalism
In the scramble for AI-led development, what would global algorithmic justice look like?
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Published in: ourNHSWill Big Tech save the NHS – or eat it alive?
Technophile politicians and tech companies are making big promises. But the broader impact of the digital...
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Published in: ourEconomy: OpinionPete Buttigieg and the gentrification of the gay politician
The mainstream media hailed Pete Buttigieg as a transformative figure for the queer community, yet his policies...
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Published in: digitaLiberties: OpinionYour man in the public gallery – Julian Assange hearing, Day Four
James Lewis QC argued that Parliament had not included a bar on extradition for political offences in the 2003 Act,...