How public-service journalism can be viable, relevant and accountable in an age of disruptive technology
Leaders from the fields of journalism, ethics and new media convened at the National Press Club. The goal: to explore how public-service journalism can be viable, relevant and accountable in an age of disruptive technology.
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Dinner conversation the night before
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A day of provocative discussion and analysis
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Mike Fancher |
Pam Johnson
Executive Director, Reynolds Journalism Institute (read more) |
Tom Bivins
John L. Hulteng Chair in Media Ethics, University of Oregon (read more) |
Mark Carter
Executive Director, Committee of Concerned Journalists (read more)
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Sharon Pian Chan
National President, Asian American Journalists Association (read more)
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Barbara Cochran
President, The Radio-
Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) (read more) |
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Deborah Gump
San Jose Mercury News, Knight-Ridder Tribune News Service, and USA Today (read more) |
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Deborah Howell
Ombudsman, Washington Post (read more) |
Rush Kidder
Founder, Institute for Global Ethics (read more)
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Bill Kovach
Founding Chairman, Committee of Concerned Journalists (read more)
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Kelly McBride
Ethics Group Leader at the Poynter Institute (read more)
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Tom Rosentiel
Vice Chair, Committee of Concerned Journalists (read more)
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Jan Schaffer
Executive Director, J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism (read more)
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Matt Thompson
2008-2009 Donald W. Reynolds Fellow (read more)
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Keith Woods
Dean of the Faculty, Poynter Institute (read more) |
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