
A lesson in journalism ethics, to name or not to name is the question
To name or not to name – that has been the hotly-debated question in so many newsrooms this week, a textbook example of journalism ethics in action, writes James Toney.

Nine News Associates nominations on NCTJ Awards for Excellence shortlists
News Associates trainees feature prominently on the shortlists for the NCTJ Awards for Excellence – with nine nominations, more than any other journalism school.

Anthony Longden Column: Rebooting public perception of journalism is key in post-Leveson world
A big chunk of journalism requires a degree of mutual trust between the writer and those providing the information.

Why some papers swear by bad language while others censor words spoken by millions every day?
Newspapers covering the recent anti-gentrification protests were faced with a censorship dilemma when it came to describing the organisers,writes Graham Dudman.

What part of the BBC’s charter says the licence fee should be spent producing a magazine?
Walk into any newsagent or supermarket and there they are – tempting you like tasty treats with their tantalising covers, writes Graham Dudman.

Shorthand is still the future: Why journalism’s old skills are still as relevant as all the new ones
The armoury of tools used by reporters to create journalism is changing as never before, writes Graham Dudman.