Author Precision Journalism and Narrative Journalism: Toward a Unified Field Theory This is the adapted text of the Hedy Lamarr Lecture Meyer delivered at the Austrian Academy of Sciences on October 3. The lecture was also sponsored by Medienhaus Wien, a… October 18, 2012 Rising to the Challenge Journalism is an escape artist.For the generation raised on Watergate, that lesson landed hard. The most powerful men in the world could not shut a story down. They lied and… October 17, 2012 On the Outside Looking In Barack Obama’s 2008 U.S. presidential win, as reported in, from left, O Povo (Fortaleza, Brazil), Apple Daily (Taipei, Taiwan), Maariv (Tel Aviv, Israel), and Die Tageszeitung (Berlin, Germany). All images… October 16, 2012 Finding a Way Forward Harvard Business School professor Clayton M. Christensen’s theory of disruptive innovation provides a framework to understand how businesses grow, become successful, and falter as nimble start-ups muscle in on their… October 16, 2012 But What About the Veterans? Foreign policy has taken a back seat in the U.S. presidential election, especially the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. But reporters should at the very least press Barack Obama and… October 16, 2012 Fall 2012: Class Notes 1946Robert Manning, an influential editor of The Atlantic Monthly, died of lymphoma at a hospital in Boston on September 28th. He was 92.Read his obituary from The Boston Globe.Manning was… October 16, 2012 The Magician’s Daughter Her childhood secrets are nothing like yours. October 15, 2012 Good Girls Don’t After suing Newsweek for sex discrimination, some women ran up against their own timidity. October 15, 2012 The Fighter An impassioned believer in the battle for Algerian independence had a few blind spots. October 15, 2012 The Big Chill The Obama administration is operating amid unprecedented secrecy—while attacking journalists trying to tell the public what they need to know. October 15, 2012 Previous 1 … 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 … 429 Next