Journalism Review Archives | Page 64 of 173 | CMFR
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House on fire: Sounding the alarm on climate change
THE HOUSE is on fire but no one seems to be hearing the alarm bells. As world leaders convened for the United Nations (UN) Climate Action Summit in New... Read more
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Remembering Ondoy: Lessons learned, more to do
CHEERS TO media organizations that produced special reports on the commemoration of the tenth year of Typhoon Ondoy, which dumped a whole month’s rainfall in just six hours on... Read more
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Nation’s eyes on Congress: Media should help!
WITHOUT MUCH public attention, Congress railroaded a pork-laden budget, but media held back questions both on the speed of approval and dubious cuts and allocations. Voting 257-6 with no... Read more
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Martial Law Anniversary: Barely in the news, missing the obvious
SEPTEMBER 21 came and went this year without much press attention. The serious lack of interest stirs concern among those who lived through the period. More than four decades... Read more
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African swine fever coverage: Minimizing panic, identifying lapses
THE DEPARTMENT of Agriculture (DA) confirmed on September 9 that African swine fever (ASF) is in the country. Pigs had been reported dying of then unknown causes, some dumped... Read more
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The BuCor controversy: Media must broaden the discourse
HOW DO you solve a problem like the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor)? The BuCor and the jail system it manages have been in dire need of solutions to longstanding... Read more
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Marginalizing the marginalized: Delayed aid for farmers
IN 2018, typhoons and rice hoarding by cartels led to a rice shortage and soaring rice prices. Government responded with Republic Act (RA) 11203 or the Rice Tariffication Law... Read more
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Flagging security concerns about Dito-AFP deal
DITO TELECOMMUNITY Corporation, formerly known as Mislatel, signed on September 11 a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) which allows the company to... Read more
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Not newsworthy: Duterte’s slur against Rappler journalists
THREE YEARS into his term, President Rodrigo Duterte’s tirades against his critics and the independent press have become predictable and pointless. They don’t contribute to public understanding of the... Read more
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Reporting the missing link: BuCor official’s death and the GCTA racket
CHEERS TO Interaksyon for a quick follow-up, immediately reporting on the possible link between the death of Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) official Ruperto Traya Jr. and the “aborted release”... Read more