Events

Upcoming Events

Inside the CFPB: An open data demo for journalists

Inside the CFPB: An open data demo for journalists

In this webinar we will explore the range of date offerings at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, learn how to access and analyze them, and discover how to turn that data into impactful stories.

Event

Zoom webinar
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM

Alt text: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau building entrance with glass doors and tree reflections; “The Journalist’s Resource” watermark.
The Cost of Local News: Paywalls, Information Inequality, and Democratic Engagement

The Cost of Local News: Paywalls, Information Inequality, and Democratic Engagement

Explore how local newspaper paywalls affect news consumption, online behavior, and political and economic knowledge, as well as voting and community engagement.

Event

Ash Center Seminar Room 225, Suite 200, 124 Mount Auburn Street
4:00 PM – 5:00 PM

Tablet displaying a news website with a pop-up that says “Subscribe today” and an email sign-up field, resting on a stack of newspapers on a wooden table.

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New York Times wins 2006 Goldsmith reporting prize

New York Times wins 2006 Goldsmith reporting prize

March 14, 2006 — The 2006 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting has been awarded to James Risen and Eric Lichtblau of the New York Times by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy for their investigative report “Domestic Spying.” Watch the Video Read the Ceremony transcript Read the Seminar transcript The […]

Event

The U.S.-Islamic Media Challenge: Twenty Versions of One Event — Similarities and Differences

The U.S.-Islamic Media Challenge: Twenty Versions of One Event — Similarities and Differences

March 14, 2006 – “The U.S.-Islamic Media Challenge: Twenty Versions of One Event — Similarities and Differences.” Brown-bag lunch with Marvin Kalb, senior fellow and founding director of the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, and Carol Saivetz, lecturer in Harvard’s Department of Government.

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Covering the Bush White House

Covering the Bush White House

March 1, 2006 – “Covering the Bush White House.” Brown-bag lunch with David Sanger, New York Times White House correspondent. Co-sponsored with the Institute of Politics.

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Global Voices: Learning to Listen to the Rest of the World

Global Voices: Learning to Listen to the Rest of the World

February 27, 2006 – “Global Voices: Learning to Listen to the Rest of the World.” Brown-bag lunch with Rebecca MacKinnon and Ethan Zuckerman of Global Voices, a nonprofit global citizens’ media project sponsored by and launched from the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Law School.

Event

Listening for the Story: A Columnist’s View

Listening for the Story: A Columnist’s View

February 21, 2006 – “Listening for the Story: A Columnist’s View.” Brown-bag lunch with Connie Schultz, columnist at the Cleveland Plain Dealer and winner of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for commentary.

Event

Melinda Liu awarded 2006 Shorenstein Prize

Melinda Liu awarded 2006 Shorenstein Prize

February 16, 2006 — The 2006 receipient of the Shorenstein Prize for Reporting on Asia is journalist Melinda Liu. The Shorenstein Journalism Award honors a journalist for a distinguished body of work that contributes to our understanding about the complexities of Asia. Liu joined Newsweek in 1980 and opened the Beijing bureau the same year; […]

Event

Journalists serve two bosses, says Ken Auletta of the New Yorker

Journalists serve two bosses, says Ken Auletta of the New Yorker

February 14, 2006 — At the Shorenstein Center’s brown-bag lunch, Ken Auletta, “Annals of Communication” columnist for the New Yorker, discussed for whom the journalist works. Broadly speaking, Auletta said, the news media serve two groups: the general readership, on the one hand; their corporate owners, on the other. The interests of these two groups […]

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We the Media: The Rise of Grassroots, Open-Source Journalism, and the Coming Era of the Citizen Activist

We the Media: The Rise of Grassroots, Open-Source Journalism, and the Coming Era of the Citizen Activist

February 13, 2006 – “We the Media: The Rise of Grassroots, Open-Source Journalism, and the Coming Era of the Citizen Activist.” A talk with Dan Gillmor, founder and director of the Center for Citizen Media. Part I of Berkman Center’s (Harvard Law School) Citizen Media Series, a series of five talks centering on recent developments in […]

Event

John Dickerson, a light skinned man with light reddish colored hair, speaks at a podium below a sign that say s
Theodore H. White Lecture

Theodore H. White Lecture on Press and Politics

Inaugurated in 1989, the Theodore H. White Lecture on Press and Politics is delivered annually by a prominent journalist, politician or historian on a topic at the intersection of media and politics. Past lecturers include Jill Lepore, John Lewis, William Safire, and Walter Cronkite.

Nancy Gibbs and Preet Bharara have a fireside chat during the 2019 Salant Lecture.
Salant Lecture

Salant Lecture on Freedom of the Press

The Salant Lecture on Freedom of the Press is delivered annually by a prominent journalist, scholar or practitioner on a topic related to press freedom or freedom of speech.

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