Journalists
in sentence
1139 examples of Journalists in a sentence
Populism With Socialist CharacteristicsPHILADELPHIA – Scholars and
journalists
have tirelessly covered the rise of populist nationalism in Europe, and especially the hardline governments in Hungary and Poland.
A Nobel laureate who teaches at Princeton University, Krugman is also a columnist for the New York Times, whose commentaries and blog, “The Conscience of a Liberal,” are read with an almost religious fervor by liberal (in the American sense) economists and
journalists
around the world.
And yet
journalists
– not very experienced reporters, to be sure – ask me who is likely to get the “plum job” of Fed Chair next year.
But a more fundamental question is why Russia’s politicians, journalists, and analysts (and even some in the West) happily engage in this ruse.
A young woman at our democracy workshop told the assembled
journalists
and lecturers, “We thought that Burma was a one-off example.
Of course, in that case, investigative
journalists
have marshaled ample evidence to suggest that the government orchestrated the attacks to bolster its public support.
Putin Made SimpleMOSCOW – Three weeks before Russian President Vladimir Putin’s first election victory, in March 2000, his campaign released a book, First Person: Conversations with Vladimir Putin, based on 24 hours of interviews with three
journalists.
COP-15 in Copenhagen lasted 12 days, and is estimated to have attracted 15,000 delegates and 5,000
journalists.
Publicly declaring support for Annan’s ceasefire plan, and then whispering to
journalists
that it is “in tatters,” as has occurred repeatedly in recent weeks, will not get the job done.
Other regulators were watching, as were academics and
journalists
– and some regulators may now feel compelled to take over the money-market safety rules from the SEC or push the SEC back into action.
Journalists
with long experience of war zones report being more worried about their safety in Mexico border than when they were in Bosnia, Afghanistan, or Iraq, though much of the violence is internecine.
In meetings with judges, academics,
journalists
and civil leaders, the top brass pointed out that Turkish law calls on the army to protect the "secular state."
Journalists
have been trying to track down the origin of Trump’s softness toward Putin.
The Nazis eliminated alternative sources of information, burning books and arresting
journalists
as they prepared to advance their goal of establishing a united “Aryan” Europe.
By using security as a pretext to flout Russia’s media legislation, which explicitly protects
journalists
from censorship, the government has undermined journalism considerably.
But the legislation’s integrity has been gradually eroded by amendments that limit free speech and journalists’ ability to work unimpeded, and by uneven application of existing rules.
Enacted in 2012, amid nationwide protests against rigged elections, it has been used most often to target
journalists
and bloggers.
Such laws make investigations into official corruption far more difficult for independent journalists, who have often been taken to court by senior managers and state officials simply for reporting on their luxurious lifestyles.
Now, digging into corruption by local police is equivalent to inciting hatred against that “social group,” and “expert” linguists have also found
journalists
to be “inciting hatred” against employees of regional administrations, judges, and other authorities.
These measures do not just limit the topics that
journalists
can safely cover; they also work to limit funding for independent media, by imposing restrictions on foreign investment and advertising.
The one law that is rarely applied is article 144 of the criminal code, which aims to protect
journalists
from harassment and other actions that obstruct their “lawful professional activities.”
As a result, according to the Glasnost Defense Foundation, journalists’ rights are violated dozens of times each month in Russia.
Journalists
face threats, attacks, damage to equipment, unfair fines, firing, bans, and other forms of censorship, often soon after publishing some kind of criticism of regional authorities, law enforcement, or wealthy businesspeople.
Knowing that no attempt to take legal action against the authorities or influencers who threaten them will produce any results, many
journalists
censor themselves.
Since 1999, when Putin first became prime minister, 34
journalists
have been killed while reporting in the country, including investigative reporter Nikolai Andrushchenko, who was beaten to death last year in St. Petersburg.
Russia today has less press freedom and more journalists, media workers, and bloggers behind bars than at any time since the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991.
This may not be the Press Freedom World Cup, but with Russia under the global spotlight, the international community can push for the release of jailed
journalists
and human-rights defenders; the repeal of draconian laws; the relaxation of government control over the media; and an end to impunity.
Journalists, politicians, and the general public have a tendency to attribute greater authority and precision to what economists say than economists should really feel comfortable with.
This was accompanied by an increase in armed violence against the police, the military, and journalists, as well as by incursions into politics and diversification of criminal income through kidnappings, extortion, piracy, and human trafficking.
So it was left up to the IPCC’s spin-doctors to present the take-home message for
journalists.
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