redundancy
Journalism From the Ashes? Paid Members Public
> In March, Hearstclosed the 146-year-old Post-Intelligencer [http://www.seattlepi.com/business/403793_piclosure17.html]newspaper and dumped 140 of us onto the street in the depths of the recession. [What happened next?](http://safetynetseattle.blogspot.com/2009/11/seven-months-later-whats-happened-to.html) For the majority, the story is pretty depressing. The
York Journalists in Lunchtime Stoppages Paid Members Public
The other side of the NUJ debate is, of course, the fact that there are dramatic levels of job cuts happening in the industry. And, in some places, those are being fought. NUJ members in York are conducting lunchtime stoppages to [protest four job cuts at Newsquest York](http://www.
What Happens to Laid Off Journalists? Paid Members Public
Roy Greenslade reports on some chilling research into the employment fate of redundant newspaper journalists in the US [http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/greenslade/2009/feb/05/usa-newspapers]: > An American Journalism Review article asks: Is there life after newspapers? To that end, it conducted a survey of journalists
Morning Coffee Reading: Tools of the Trade Paid Members Public
Some great links about digital journalism in 2009
Blogging Your Way Out of the Hackopalypse? Paid Members Public
In a meeting earlier, I made a throw-away remark about the publishing news being so bad between now and next spring that all our journalists will be scared stiff. I was joking. But judging by the news coming in (hat tip to Heidi from Computer Weekly [http://twitter.com/computerweekly]