Al Jazeera Journalism Review
Why are Zimbabwe’s elections always surrounded by media controversy?
Election season in Zimbabwe has long been shrouded in controversy, with intimidation of opposition activists and journalists, combined with disorganisation at the ballots creating a perfect storm for chaos. This year was no different
Analysis: The media’s coverage of the Pakistan cable car incident
It was a roller coaster ride with news organisations all over the world giving minute-by-minute reports on the daring rescue. How does the media create suspense and is this sort of coverage useful?
How to use data to report on earthquakes
Sifting through data sounds clinical, but journalists can use it to seek out the human element when reporting on natural disasters such as earthquakes
‘I had no idea how to report on this’ - local journalists tackling climate change stories
Local journalists are key to informing the public about the devastating dangers of climate change but, in India, a lack of knowledge, training and access to expert sources is holding them back
Ethical reporting - how to cover suicide responsibly
Sensationalist reporting of suicide cases has been shown to cause a rise in the numbers of people taking their own lives in affected communities. Journalists must take great care
‘Don’t let someone else narrate your stories for you’ - travel journalists in the global south
THE LONG READ: Life as a travel journalist isn’t just for privileged Westerners ‘discovering’ quaint parts of south-east Asia and Africa
‘People need to stop blindly obeying the law’ - journalists fighting on the fringes in Vietnam
THE LONG READ: Imprisoned, exiled and forced to base themselves overseas, independent journalists in Vietnam are punished harshly if they publish the ‘wrong’ sort of content. Some, such as Luật Khoa tạp chí, are fighting back
Ethics and safety in OSINT - can you believe what you see?
OSINT is increasingly important for journalists in a digital world. We take a look at ethics, safety on the internet and how to spot a ‘deepfake’
‘Other journalists jeer at us’ – life for mobile journalists in Cameroon
Journalists in Cameroon are using their phones in innovative ways to report the news for many different types of media, but major news organisations have still not caught up
‘Life of journalists is cheap’ - how the Philippines became deadly for reporters
Forging ahead with a career in journalism is fraught with difficulty in the Philippines - and many are walking away. What went so wrong?
Analysis: Could AI replace humans in journalism?
Recent advances in AI are mind-blowing. But good journalism requires certain skills which, for now at least, only humans can master
Analysis: Comparing coverage of the Titanic submersible and migrant boat disasters
Two disasters costing human lives have occurred at sea in the past two weeks, but the media coverage of each was markedly different. How and why?
The silencing of Sudan's journalists - again
THE LONG READ: Detained, beaten and their cameras smashed - Sudan’s journalists are enduring a renewed crackdown on the media
'Rebuilt memory by memory' - recreating a Palestinian village 75 years after the Nakba
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: How it took the collective memories of several generations, painstaking interviews and a determined search through tall grass and prickly plants to recreate a destroyed community
Suffering in silence - the Kashmiri journalists facing a mental health crisis
THE LONG READ: Al Jazeera Journalism Review has interviewed more than 20 journalists in India-controlled Kashmir who are facing exhausting, insurmountable obstacles to doing their jobs safely every single day