CENTER FOR INTEGRATION AND IMPROVEMENT OF JOURNALISM
 
 

Reports

 
The State of the News Media 2006
Scan the headlines of 2005 and one question seems inevitable: Will we recall this as the year when journalism in print began to die?
 
Changing Demographics Pose Tough Questions
The analysis released today by the Applied Research Center tracks demographic changes along racial lines between 2000 and 2005.
 
Online Papers Modestly Boost Newspaper Readership
A decade ago, just one-in-fifty Americans got the news with some regularity from the internet. Today, nearly one-in-three regularly get news online.
 
New York Times: Class Matters
A team of reporters spent more than a year exploring ways that class - defined as a combination of income, education, wealth and occupation - influences destiny in a society that likes to think of itself as a land of unbounded opportunity.
 
New Research Shows Americans' Love-Hate Relationship with Journalism
A new study shows that Americans have a more positive, more complicated set of attitudes toward journalism than the recent wave of media criticism implies.

by George Kennedy