Oxford's Centre for Research into News Media

The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism was established in autumn 2006, with core funding from the Thomson Reuters Foundation, and is part of the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford.

News

  1. The Impact of Censorship on the Development of the Private Press Industry in Myanmar/ Burma

    Kyaw Thu, a journalist from Myanmar/Burma, has written a path-breaking study on how a long...

  2. Logo: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

    A Million Media Now! The Rise of India on the Global Scene

    In spite of many its shortcomings, the boom in the Indian media has given positive dividends to...

  3. Regulating the Press: A comparative study of international press councils

    What can we learn from press councils overseas? The lesson that rapidly emerges from an exploration...

More News

  1. ‘More carrot and less stick’ needed to frame future press regulation in the UK
  2. Survival is Success—new RISJ Challenge by Bruno and Nielsen published today
  3. Butler Lecture "The Second Superpower" now available to watch online
  4. The Death of Osama bin Laden: Global TV News and Journalistic Detachment
  5. Call for applications from Lebanon, Palestine and Syria for the new Said-Asfari Fellowships for Journalists
  6. Numbers are weapons - A self defence guide
see all

Featured Content

  • About the Journalism Fellowship Programme

    The Journalism Fellowship Programme at Oxford offers a practical form of professional assistance to established and mid-career journalists. Its purpose is to allow journalists to tackle subjects in greater depth than is possible under deadline pressure.

  • Media Landscapes

    These media landscapes aim to provide a working journalist’s personal view of the media situation in their individual countries.

  • Survival is Success: Journalistic Online Start-Ups in Western Europe

    This report systematically assesses how journalistic online start-ups are doing across Western Europe. It shows that the economics of online news today are as challenging for new entrants as they are for industry incumbents. Survival in itself should be considered a form of success in this...