Fellow

Paolo Mancini

Paolo Mancini is Chair of the undergraduate Program in Scienze della Comunicazione (Communication Sciences) and Chair of the Ph.D. program in Teoria e Ricerca Sociale e Politica (Social and Political Theory and Research), both at the Università di Perugia.

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Colin Seymour-Ure

His publications cover the role of the press and broadcasting in a wide range of issues and institutions: Downing Street and White House news management; election campaigns; images of Tony Blair and John Major in the Sun and Daily Mirror; press partisanship; the power of media barons; media policy; political rumours.

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Warren Mitofsky

Warren Mitofsky is a founding editor of the Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, and an elected member of the National Academy of Science. His Fellowships include those with the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Center for Advanced Study in

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Carol B. Conaway

Carol B. Conaway is associate professor emerita of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of New Hampshire. Her research interests include Jews of color, racial and ethnic conflict, gender and sexual orientation, media, social justice, and political rhetoric.

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Elizabeth C. Hanson

Elizabeth C. Hanson’s publications have covered a wide range of subjects in international relations, including the foreign policy beliefs of American businessmen, national policies with respect to foreign direct investment, the role of conferences in international scientific communication, and the impact of new information and communication technologies on world politics.

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Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen has been on the faculty at New York University since 1986. In 1999, Yale University Press published his book, What Are Journalists For?, which is about the rise of the civic journalism movement. Rosen wrote and spoke frequently about civic journalism (also called public journalism) over a ten-year period, 1989-99. From 1993 to

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Nik Gowing

Nik Gowing was a main presenter for the BBC’s international 24-hour news channel BBC World News 1996-2014. He presented ‘The Hub with Nik Gowing’, BBC World Debates, Dateline London, plus location coverage of major global stories. He is now Founder and Co-Director of Thinking the Unthinkable – an independent project helping leaders understand the threats

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