Zoe Daniel – a working journalist profile
Zoe Daniel is in her second posting as an ABC foreign correspondent. She tells Vivien Durant about her experiences and the future of journalism.
Zoe Daniel is in her second posting as an ABC foreign correspondent. She tells Vivien Durant about her experiences and the future of journalism.
Former The Age journalist James Button talks to Matt Smith about his about his career and the continuing need for foreign correspondents, in this Life After Journalism podcast.
Former ABC foreign correspondent Bob Wurth talks to Matt Smith in the first episode of the Life After Journalism project.
Zoe Daniel is in her second posting as an ABC foreign correspondent. She tells Vivien Durant about her experiences and the future of journalism.
Former The Age journalist James Button talks to Matt Smith about his about his career and the continuing need for foreign correspondents, in this Life After Journalism podcast.
Former ABC foreign correspondent Bob Wurth talks to Matt Smith in the first episode of the Life After Journalism project.
Former ABC foreign correspondent Zoe Daniel will be speaking to students at La Trobe University next week.
Zoe Daniel is in her second posting as an ABC foreign correspondent. She tells Vivien Durant about her experiences and the future of journalism.
Former The Age journalist James Button talks to Matt Smith about his about his career and the continuing need for foreign correspondents, in this Life After Journalism podcast.
Former ABC foreign correspondent Bob Wurth talks to Matt Smith in the first episode of the Life After Journalism project.
As current editor of The Big Issue and former foreign correspondent for The Age, Alan Attwood has had a varied career. Suzannah Marshall Macbeth talks to him about the street magazine and about not specialising as a writer.
Journalists must record what they see, but in extreme circumstances “the facts” can be hard to comprehend. In this selection for our ‘100 articles’ project, The Age’s former China correspondent, Peter Ellingsen, recalls reporting on the Tiananmen Square massacre.
Foreign correspondent jobs have always been highly sought after. But what is the future of reporting for one’s home country from a disant desitnation? As part of our ‘100 articles’ project, James Briggs considers a sobering 2007 Washington Post piece by Pamela Constable.
War reporting is changing, and as Hanna Jacobsen writes, the controversial book “Fit to Print – misrepresenting the Middle East” paints a distrurbing picture of the future of the role of the foreign correspondent.