A laurel for the Detroit Free Press September 16, 2013 By David Cay Johnston Deeply reported coverage explodes simplistic myths about how the Motor City went bankrupt
Does Gannett think its own papers matter? August 16, 2013 By Anna Clark As job cuts hit the chain, coverage–and answers–are in short supply
Citizen Wanes May 28, 2013 By John Mecklin The Bay Citizen brand winks out–and leaves behind a lesson about nonprofit governance
Inside the Indonesian Newsroom: the good, the bad, the hopeful May 3, 2013 By Lawrence Pintak A survey provides a new snapshot
A reporter is fired; colleagues quit in protest November 19, 2012 By Peter Sterne The Hudson Register-Star reporter refused to include information in his story
By the lake September 10, 2012 By Richard C. Wald A meditation on journalism as a record of who we are
Anthony Shadid: ‘A Gatherer, An Observer, A Listener’ February 17, 2012 By David E. Hoffman One of his former editors remembers the greatest foreign correspondent of his generation
Why Aren’t More Arab Americans Working in Mainstream Journalism? January 31, 2012 By Justin D. Martin Group remains underrepresented in US newsrooms
Will the IRS Derail Nonprofit Journalism? November 21, 2011 By Steven Waldman At a crucial moment, the taxman drags his feet on granting tax-exempt status
What I Saw at the Hyperlocal Revolution November 17, 2011 By David Watts Barton Without journalism jobs, we don’t have journalism
How Do Journos Find Time to Fight Corrections? November 16, 2011 By Justin D. Martin Instead of arguing over factual errors, fix them and move on
Occupy Protests Present a New Terrain of Risk for Reporters November 15, 2011 By Natasha Lennard Journalists physically removed from Occupy Wall Street raid
Safety Tips for Covering Occupy Wall Street November 7, 2011 By Judith Matloff And civil disorder in general