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2014 Polis Lunchtime Talks Speaker Programme

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Throughout the term Polis will be inviting a number of media and communications professionals and journalists to come speak to staff and students at lunchtime on Wednesdays. Bring your lunch and join us from 13:00-14:00 weekly as we listen to talks by speakers on topics such as working in political communications and verifying stories in the context of the crisis in the Ukraine.

 

“Battling for Truth: Russian propaganda, fake news and the war in Ukraine”

Location: NAB 2.06
Date: Wednesday, 29 October
Time: 13:00-14:00

YFYevhen Fedchenko will analyse how Russian government-sponsored and government-led propaganda became a powerful weapon in a war with Ukraine. Compared to military warfare impacting mainly East of Ukraine, information warfare and propaganda has great impact beyond the region, spreading to the rest of Ukraine, Russia and the West.

Fake news became cornerstone of disinformation campaign against Ukraine. Due to social media nature, they spread increasingly rapidly, stealing the narrative and destructing the journalism.

StopFake.org volunteer project was launched by students, alumni and faculty of the Mohyla school of journalism to fact-check and debunk fake news. We analyze Russian mainstream media outlets and social media and already debunked more than 300 false and twisted stories, photos, videos.

Yevhen Fedchenko is a co-founder of fact-checking website StopFake.org, Director of the Mohyla School of Journalism and the Head of Ph.D. Program in Mass Comm at National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Kyiv, Ukraine. He spent almost 20 years with media industry, covering international stories for different types of media.

 

“Disease, disaster and despair?’ Health stories from low- and middle-income countries in the Australian news media” A talk by Michelle Imison

Location: 32L G.06
Date: Wednesday, 5 November
Time: 13:00-14:00

MichelleIn high-income nations, mainstream television news remains an important source of information about both health and low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). A good deal is already known about the way that television treats these discrete areas of news, but there is very little literature about the news coverage of health from LMICs. This presentation will encapsulate the findings from my PhD thesis which, drawing on the University of Sydney’s Australian Health News Research Collaboration (AHNRC) database, addressed the issue in an Australian context.

The presentation concludes by reflecting on the implications of Australian news and current affairs coverage of LMIC health for media audiences, government policy, development agencies and LMICs themselves.

Michelle Imison holds a Bachelor of Arts with Honours and a Masters of International Public Health, and has recently graduated with a PhD from the School of Public Health at the University of Sydney. She was an Australian Youth Ambassador for Development in Bangladesh in 2004-05 and a member of the Board of Oxfam Australia from 2008 to 2012.

 

“Whats it like to be a political journalist?” A talk by Paul Eastham

Location: Clement House, Room 6.02.
Date: Wednesday, 12 November
Time: 13:00-14:00

Paul EasthamIn an entertaining talk, Paul Eastham, former Deputy Political Editor of the Daily Mail reflects on a career in political journalism.

As deputy Political Editor at the Daily Mail, Paul flew around the world with Prime Ministers and Cabinet Members, unearthed a string of agenda-setting scoops and developed a reputation for his tenacious reporting style. He was inside Qaddafi’s Bedouin tent when Blair and Qaddafi signed their deal, and his revelations included how Tony Blair agreed to reveal the name of Iraq weapons expert Dr David Kelly.

He is a fascinating speaker on the unique mixture of irreverence, grit and idealism which propels any good journalist. As well as anecdotes about Thatcher, Major, and Blair, Paul can also offer some striking reflections on British politics and the effects of the current Mail’s infamous editorship on British national life. Paul’s talks are down to earth, funny, and thoughtful, and he is particularly good at communicating the thrill of chasing and then publishing a story which sets the news agenda, and the qualities that motivate all good journalism: a belief in holding people to account, idealism and a sense of fun.

This event is particularly recommended for journalists, politicians, and everyone who aspires to be, and anyone involved in the changing media landscape in the era of Leveson and technological challenges to reporting and publishing.

 

A map of the LSE is available here

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