Engagement officer Elena Richards Coldicutt explains. Discover what goes on behind the scenes in regulated publishers' newsrooms and much more… The post What can you find in a publisher Annual Statement? appeared first on IPSO.| IPSO
Reporting on the issues that affect children is an important aspect of journalism but needs to be done with care and thought The post Reporting on children – expert discussion appeared first on IPSO.| IPSO
“We’re going to be left with people who go: ‘You know what, my uncle or my brother or my cousin died from bowel cancer. And it should have been picked up in a screening programme.’ Make no mistake, these deaths are unnecessary.” — Dr Rawiri McKree Jansen.| E-Tangata
“Just like that, we were told there’d be no more books and language support for our children and families. It's been devastating. I want whoever’s in charge of these literacy funding decisions to walk in my shoes for a day.” — Alana Nootai.| E-Tangata
“It doesn’t make sense. The minister has been positive about tamariki succeeding in Māori immersion learning. But now the very people who support this to happen effectively are in the firing line.” — Ripeka Lessels.| E-Tangata
“While Māori generally support rainbow rights, many are also Christian. And on some level, they will feel conflicted about Tāmaki’s agenda. So, they become passive observers, unintentionally complicit in the hatred of takatāpui.” — Anton Blank.| E-Tangata
“If the Indonesian government has its way, the area we’ve always called home, where we’ve lived and hunted for thousands of years, will cease to exist.”— Rosa Moiwend.| E-Tangata
“NZ’s current lack of action is deeply rooted in its problematic approach to this issue in the past — a past which straddles an involvement in Palestine since the First World War, through to today.” — John Hobbs.| E-Tangata
“Pacific countries and territories trying to assert their sense of autonomy need to be treated with respect and mana, and not be growled at in a paternalistic way, as if they’re delinquent juveniles.” — Professor Steven Ratuva.| E-Tangata
“I couldn’t, in all honesty, remain in my roles. The government didn’t seem interested in listening to genuine public health advice.” — Sir Collin Tukuitonga.| E-Tangata
“Our more middle-class economic status . . . owes everything to the housing and health policies of the former welfare state in the 1950s, and nothing to gold.” — Catherine Delahunty, whose great-grandfather was a miner in the Thames gold rush.| E-Tangata
“Waitangi should be a place where political leaders are made to justify their decisions from the past year, to take stock of how they’re upholding their side of the Treaty partnership.” — Jamie Tahana.| E-Tangata
When organisations engage us to deliver communication and collaboration programmes, one of the key benefits they’re looking for is to enable their organisations to better Work Out Loud. That is, to purposefully make your work visible so that it can be committed to corporate memory, built on, shared and learned from. For individuals, Working Out Loud (or WOL for short) can help to build relationships, improve skills and raise profiles. For companies, it can mean more work is committed to cor...| Intranetizen
In 1993 I had a custom-built computer. And it was great. I could choose the 386 processor and 16MB RAM to meet my expectations and budget. And it suited me perfectly. As I watched photos load a line of pixels at a time and it blew my tiny little mind. But would I do it now? Hell no. I go to the Mac store and choose between the space grey and the rose gold because it does everything I need it to and more. Continue reading Should you buy or build your intranet? at Intranetizen.| Intranetizen
The publication this week of the 2019 Edelman Trust Barometer report provides fascinating insight for HR and Communications teams with implications for digital workplace professionals. This year, Trust at Work is the overarching theme, coinciding with the crowning of “My Employer” has the most trusted group globally. We dive behind the charts for the details. Trust cannot be assumed or banked, but can be built While there have been notable nudges in the right direction across the last yea...| Intranetizen
The government has a new policy paper about its vision for digital services in the NHS and It’s well worth reading The future of healthcare: our vision for digital, data and technology in health and care, published in October, is a positive and ambitious starting point for improving digital services across the NHS. Taking inspiration and learnings from improvements in standards made by the government digital service (GDS), the paper outlines the issues currently faced across hospitals, care...| Intranetizen