<p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-thumbnail inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/thumbnail/images/Esther Enkin_22.JPG" title="" /><strong>By Esther Enkin, CBC ombudsman</strong></p>
READ MORE<p><em><img alt="" class="imagecache-medium-left inline-image" src="http://projetj.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/medium-left/images/Julie Ireton_0.JPG" title="" /></em></p><p> </p><p><em>Par <em>Julie Ireton, reporter à CBC Ottawa et par deux fois récipiendaire de la </em></em><em>bourse Michener-Deacon pour le journalisme d’enquête.<em> Elle enseigne à temps partiel à l’école de journalisme de l’université Carleton où elle propose un cours sur l’innovation et l’entreprenariat. Vous pouvez tweeter avec elle via @JulieIreton.</em></em></p>
READ MORE<p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-thumbnail inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/thumbnail/images/Rick MacInnes-Rae_0.JPG" title="" /> <strong>By Tamara Baluja, Associate Editor</strong></p><p>CBC world affairs correspondent Rick MacInnes-Rae is retiring after 37 years with the public broadcaster.</p><p>His last day is Friday.</p><p>MacInnes-Rae has worked with the CBC in Ontario, New Brunswick and Newfoundland as well as assignments with the Washington and London bureaus. </p>
READ MORE<p><strong>By Tamara Baluja, Associate Editor</strong></p><p>Jackson Proskow has been named the Washington bureau chief for Global National.</p><p>Proskow, currently the City Hall reporter with Global Toronto, will replace <a href="http://j-source.ca/article/washington-correspondent-robin-stickley-anchor-early-news-global-bc" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Robin Stickley who is returning to Vancouver</a> in August to anchor <em>Early News </em>on Global BC.</p>
READ MORE<p><strong>By Michael Robinson</strong></p><p>In April 2015, I will graduate with a Honours Bachelor of Arts in Journalism from the University of Ottawa. </p><p>I will be one of the very last to graduate with such a degree. </p><p>This is because the University of Ottawa is rebooting its journalism program for the digital age, putting to rest its original four-year journalism program <a href="http://j-source.ca/article/journalism-program-hold-another-year-uottawa">that was suspended last summer</a>. </p>
READ MORE<p><em><img alt="" class="imagecache-medium-left inline-image" src="http://projetj.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/medium-left/images/Janice Tibbetts_0_0.JPG" title="" /></em></p><p> </p><p> </p><p><em>Par Janice Tibbetts, professeur de journalisme à l’Université Concordia à Montréal. Elle a travaillé durant plus de deux décennies pour les quotidiens du groupe Posmedia News, la Presse Canadienne, le Chronicle-Herald, le Halifax Daily News. Elle a surtout couvert les affaires judiciaires et la politique tant fédérale que provinciale.</em></p>
READ MORE<p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-thumbnail inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/thumbnail/images/Esther Enkin_20.JPG" title="" /><strong>By Esther Enkin, CBC ombudsman</strong></p>
READ MORE<p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-thumbnail inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/thumbnail/images/Sylvia Stead_18.JPG" title="" /><strong>By Sylvia Stead, public editor for <em>The Globe and Mail</em></strong></p><p>Two recent high-profile court cases involving journalists are likely to evoke quite different responses from you as a reader.</p>
READ MORE<p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-thumbnail inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/thumbnail/images/Stephen Ward_0.JPG" title="" /> <strong>By Tamara Baluja, Associate Editor </strong></p><p>Canadian media ethicist Stephen Ward has launched a new website, <a href="http://www.mediamorals.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Media Morals</a>, that will explore journalism ethics in global media world.</p>
READ MORE<p><strong>By Janice Tibbetts</strong></p><p>The rise of “advocacy journalism” seems to be raising the question, both in Canada and the United States, of whether journalism schools should diversify along with the business.</p><p>This debate has been playing out in recent months at Montreal’s Concordia University, where the journalism department in which I teach is considering turning its graduate diploma into a global journalism program that trains students to report for international NGOs.</p>
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