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16 November 2016
Reuters: innovating to stay ahead - from pigeons to multimedia
Jane Barrett, global head of multimedia, Editorial, Reuters -
09 November 2016
Strength in numbers – how journalists cracked the Panama Papers
Holly Watt, investigations correspondent, the Guardian -
02 November 2016
Quartz things: a mobile-first approach to stories
Akshat Rathi, Reporter, Quartz -
26 October 2016
From Afghanistan to a more dangerous world
Christina Lamb, foreign affairs correspondent, Sunday Times -
19 October 2016
How the BBC reaches digital audiences in South Asia
Roopa Suchak, South Asia workstream lead, BBC -
12 October 2016
How journalism faces a second wave of disruption from technology and changing audience behaviour
Nic Newman, Research Associate, Reuters Institute -
10 June 2016
Human rights, the media and politics
Sir Keir Starmer, Labour MP for Holborn and St Pancras, and former Director of Public Prosecutions -
20 May 2016
Is political journalism broken?
Helen Lewis, deputy editor of New Statesman and a presenter of the BBC’s Week in Westminster -
13 May 2016
The Panama Papers: the inside story of the world’s biggest leak
Luke Harding, foreign correspondent, The Guardian, and author of ‘A Very Expensive Poison: the Definitive Story of the Murder of Litvinenko’ -
06 May 2016
Guiding public opinion" in the digital age: the Party and the media in China
Isabel Hilton, editor, China Dialogue.net -
29 April 2016
'We're losing our free speech – a trigger warning
Mick Hume, editor-at-large of Spiked.com and author of ‘Trigger Warning: Is the Fear of Being Offensive Killing Free Speech?’ -
15 June 2016
Russian media: oppressor or oppressed?
Yulia Netesova, visiting fellow at CIS LSE, foreign affairs correspondent at the Rosbalt news agency