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Media dialogue

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  • Twitter Website (photo: picture alliance/dpa)
    Social Media in Turkey

    Circumventing Censorship

    A growing number of young Turks are turning to social media, complaining that mainstream media are being increasingly controlled by the government. Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul

  • Erol Önderoğlu (photo: Arian Fariborz)
    Press Freedom in Turkey

    Against the Criminalization of Journalism

    Despite some reforms and ongoing negotiations for EU membership, Turkey's ranking in the Reporters without Borders Press Freedom Index remains strikingly low. Qantara's Fatma Kayabal spoke to, Erol Önderoğlu, the organization's correspondent in Istanbul

  • Ulrich Kienzle (photo: Rudolf Simon)
    Memoirs of Middle East Reporting

    ''Somebody had to go to Cairo''

    The memoirs of former Middle East correspondent Ulrich Kienzle document how the spirit of optimism in the German media of the late 1960s and 1970s hooked up with the quixotic political idealism of the time. A review by Andreas Pflitsch

  • Latuff cartoon: Mubarak tries to censor Al Jazeera (image: Latauff/Wikipedia)
    Al Jazeera and Qatar

    Accessories of the Arab Spring

    The Arab Spring, a true popular uprising against decades of corruption and repression, owed its astonishingly rapid spread not least to the Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera, says media analyst Khaled Hroub

  • Young Egyptian reading Al-Ahram, one day after Mubarak's fall (photo: AP)
    The Image of the West in the Arab Media

    The Perception of the Other

    Lebanese media expert Maurice Abu Nader summarises the results of the latest report by the "Arab Thought Foundation" on inter-cultural dialogue – a report that undertakes a detailed examination of the perception of the West as portrayed by the newspapers "Al-Hayat" and "Al-Ahram"

  • Al-Jazeera editorial room in Doha, Qatar (photo: AP)
    Arab and Western Media 10 Years after 9/11

    When Is a Martyr a Martyr?

    Ten years after the attacks of 11 September 2001, international media need an East–West consensus – and not just with regard to the usage of key terms. Common standards and ethical norms are indispensable for reporting in crisis situations. A commentary by Loay Mudhoon

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