Media
How does a fast-changing media landscape shape public perceptions and policy outcomes? Can public policy regulate disinformation in the United States and globally?
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Leveling the Airwaves: FCC Reform and the Fight for Electoral Fairness
By pegging advertising costs to the least expensive market, the national Lowest Unit Rate ensures every candidate can afford to reach voters across early states without excessive financial barriers. This reform removes the advantage wealthy or well-funded candidates currently hold, creating a more inclusive primary competition.Explore all Articles
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Inside the propaganda war for Mosul
02.5.17
A propaganda war between the Iraqi government and ISIL is raging alongside the military campaign to retake Mosul.

Out of sight, out of mind? Blocking Doha News in Qatar
01.12.17
For nearly eight years, one of the few sources of meaningful journalism about life inside Qatar – as opposed to the the gas- and oil-rich country’s dealings abroad – has been Doha News. Yet since the close of November, the online site’s articles on cultural, economic, and policy developments have been blocked in the one […]

From ‘parallel state’ to ‘terrorist organization’: Dissecting Erdoğan’s labeling of Gülen
11.15.16
Embed from Getty Images For Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, enemies are everywhere. His speeches and official comments are littered with references to the hostile elements lurking in Turkey, the so-called “parallel state.” Erdoğan has long used the “parallel state” term to refer to the movement founded in the early 1970s by Turkish Muslim […]

Why post-coup Turkey is suspicious of Hillary Clinton
10.29.16
Embed from Getty Images “Turkey is at a crossroads!” has become the rallying cry for commentators as the country grapples with terrorism, a coup attempt, and a reshaping of its domestic and international stances. The cliché has long described Turkey as a country straddling two continents, torn between East and West – its imperial history tied to […]

From Racism to Terrorism: the Jihadi Siren Call
10.27.16
Throughout his campaign for president of the United States, Republican nominee Donald Trump has time and time again denigrated Muslim communities living on American soil and abroad. Trump’s critics have underscored how promoting the prejudicial treatment of Muslims only helps to strengthen anti-American Islamist organizations. By targeting Muslims, the arguments go, Trump inadvertently validates claims made […]

Jihadi Jpegs & The Millennial Caliphate: The Islamic State’s Internet generation
10.11.16
With the rise of the Islamic State, for the first time in nearly 100 years the call to prayer was heard in a caliphate. But the muezzin call of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was not merely incanted from a minaret in Mosul – in the ancient style his followers claim to espouse. Nor was it just […]

In Defense of Grief: Sorrow in the Digital Age
09.9.16
BY LAUREN VIEHBACHER In the span of three days this past March, bombs ripped through daily life in Istanbul and Brussels. Police flooded Istiklal Street in Istanbul, a famous pedestrian stretch usually humming with shoppers. Helicopters circled overhead, citizens scattered in terror, and yellow tape fluttered across the street. Five people were killed and close […]

No-Show News Media on the Panama Papers
04.6.16
BY JEN SMITH Over the weekend, the Panama Papers were top news from Argentina to Zimbabwe. They have dominated the coverage in The Guardian and Financial Times, two British papers. By contrast, the New York Times placed the story on page 3; the Washington Post and Wall Street Journal were similarly quiet. With more than […]

How Technology Is Shaping Thought Leadership In Africa
01.27.16
Leadership is replacing Africa rising as the new meme for Africa. Fellowships, conferences and think tanks are all geared at building a new generation of African leaders armed with smartphones and tablets. By simple definition, a leader directs or guides a group of people for a certain purpose. However, the contemporary leader is the thought […]

Indian Media: Crisis in the Fourth Estate
08.18.15
BY UZRA KHAN This piece appeared in our 2015 print journal. You can order your copy here. One morning in 2014, Deepika Saran,1 a young employee at an e-commerce startup in Mumbai, got a call from The Times Group, India’s largest mass media company. “We’re interested in featuring your company in a supplemental spread on new […]

Bridging the Connectivity Gap in Our Nation’s Schools
07.16.15
BY TYLER S. THIGPEN This piece appeared in our 2015 print journal. You can order your copy here. The conversation that most haunted Marshall Chambers—former director of strategic initiatives for Barrow County Schools, a rural district in Georgia—happened in 2001 at one of the district’s high schools. Chambers, himself a graduate of Piedmont College in Demorest, […]

The Digital Gender Gap: Unleashing the Value of the Internet for Women
04.30.15
BY MIA MITCHELL Today, four billion people, or two-thirds of the planet, are offline, but that is rapidly changing. Momentum is building among private, public, and non-profit actors to expand Internet access globally. From Facebook’s Internet.org to the Alliance for Affordable Internet to Oluvus, numerous projects have launched in recent years with the shared goal […]



