Embedding Reporters on the Frontline By Nancy Bernhard• June 15, 2003 With regained public trust, watchdog reporting might be more welcomed for its role in protecting democracy. Read more
Embedded Reporting By Dan Kennedy• June 15, 2003 Is objectivity an acceptable casualty of this kind of reporting? Read more
The Safety of Journalists Who Cover Wars June 15, 2003 ‘Communications have changed everything—on the battlefield and at home.’ Read more
In War, Journalists Become Part of the Problem By Chris Hedges• June 15, 2003 ‘It was horrifying, confusing, numbing and nothing like the myth I had been peddled.’ Read more
Presidential Secrecy and Reporters’ Efforts to Breach It By Sam Donaldson• June 15, 2003 A former White House correspondent suggests ways to ask more probing questions. Read more
The Press and Freedom By Bob Edwards• June 15, 2003 A radio journalist spots disturbing trends in how the White House press corps reports on the Bush administration. Read more
Examining Press Coverage of the War June 15, 2003 ‘What is lacking in so much of the instantaneous coverage is verification and historical context, the things that turn coverage into reporting.’ Read more
Covering the War Before It Started By Michael Getler• June 15, 2003 While Iraq war coverage worked well, did journalists probe enough about policies and evidence that led to this war being waged? Read more
Are Journalists Asking the Right Questions? June 15, 2003 ‘Too many of my sources of information have let me down.’ Read more
What Should News Organizations Do for Access? June 15, 2003 Revelations by CNN’s Eason Jordan spark a debate among journalists. Read more