FROM THE ARCHIVE
JULY 19, 2000 In an editorial "Free press = free society" published today, The Billings Gazette comments on the state of freedom of the press on reservations. The paper quotes a study written by Karen Lincoln Michel, a free-lance writer that appeared in the Columbia Journalism Review. The paper cites examples of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma newspaper and the Lummi Nation of Washington newsletter. The paper says that some Montana tribal governments have exploited their own people through the press. The paper does not cite any tribes or examples. Get the Story:
EDITORIAL: Free press = free society (The Billings Gazette 7/19) Relevant Links:
The Native American Journalism Association - www.naja.com
Columbia Journalism Review - www.cjr.org Articles from the Columbia Journalism Review:
First Amendment Repression on the Reservation (Part 1) (CJR Nov/Dec 1998)
First Amendment Repression on the Reservation (Part 2) (CJR Nov/Dec 1998)
A Native Press Primer (CJR Nov/Dec 1998)
EDITORIAL: Native news
Facebook TwitterJULY 19, 2000 In an editorial "Free press = free society" published today, The Billings Gazette comments on the state of freedom of the press on reservations. The paper quotes a study written by Karen Lincoln Michel, a free-lance writer that appeared in the Columbia Journalism Review. The paper cites examples of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma newspaper and the Lummi Nation of Washington newsletter. The paper says that some Montana tribal governments have exploited their own people through the press. The paper does not cite any tribes or examples. Get the Story:
EDITORIAL: Free press = free society (The Billings Gazette 7/19) Relevant Links:
The Native American Journalism Association - www.naja.com
Columbia Journalism Review - www.cjr.org Articles from the Columbia Journalism Review:
First Amendment Repression on the Reservation (Part 1) (CJR Nov/Dec 1998)
First Amendment Repression on the Reservation (Part 2) (CJR Nov/Dec 1998)
A Native Press Primer (CJR Nov/Dec 1998)
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You are enjoying stories from the Indianz.Com Archive, a collection dating back to 2000. Some outgoing links may no longer work due to age.
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