Crooked Nations, Crroked Journalists
By Marlan Padayachee and Phindile Ngubane
RjR - Issue 17Guest Editorial: Charlene Smith on the foreign bratpack corpsLesotho: Adil Bradlow reports from a war zone; MISA reports on the effects of the invasion of the mediaThe HRC investigation: How do we avoid racism in a time of ubiquitous racism? By Gavin StewartBuilding the power of black SA journalists: Lizeka Mda interviewed by Ferial HaffajeeTwo unequal Americas and what black journalists did about it, by Dorothy Butler GilliamVote and make your fist time perfect. An election campaign for the youth by the youthScratch and Win: Margaret Waller critiques M-Net's use of Kevin Carter's picSection 205: Time to cry halt by Ryland Fisher; two law experts unpack the Bogoshi judgement; Sanef's record of understanding with the governmentThe way we were in the 20th century, by Lynette SteenveldWho qualifies to be an African? By Anthea GarmanThe election's just around the corner. Are you poll prepared? Take the test with Guy BergerThe great re-design of Business Day by Kerry SwiftThe next agenda for the media on the TRC by Hugh LewinAnd what about the spies? By Roger FriedmanWhere there's smoke there's advertising revenue by Manette Marais100 years of Namibian media by Gwen ListerYFM's Randall Abrahams interviewed by Larry StrelitzFast and furious, the new financial agencies by Brendan BoyleThe naked truth about transformation by Sandile MemeleThe Legal Journalist of the Year Award - advance noticeWhat's happening in community media by Clive EmdonThe Sunday Times goes gay-bashing by Brett LockInvestigative journalism: crossing international barriers by Michel Bajuk; all the brave winners; locals who do the job talk about it by Patrick Burnett; and Danny Schechter asks if reporters who dig are dying outCrooked nations, crooked journalists by Phindile Ngubane and Marlan Padayachee
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