By Topic
Role of the Media in Our Democracy: War Reporting
Kevin Cullen former London Bureau Chief, Boston Globe
Samantha Power founder, Carr Center, 2003 Pulitzer Prize
Anthony Shadid Washington Post, 2004 Pulitzer Prize
David Greenberg professor, media studies, Rutgers University
David Greenberg, professor of Media Studies at Rutgers Univeristy, moderates a panel discussion on the responsibilities of the press when it comes to war reporting. Panelists include Kevin Cullen, columnist for the Boston Globe, Samantha Power, who's book A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide won the 2003 Pulitzer for General Non-Fiction, and Anthony Shadid of the Washington Post, who won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 2004 for his coverage of the Iraq War.
A free and independent press is essential for democracy. The press has a responsibility to inform citizens about both the policies and actions of our government and any credible challenges to those policies and actions; to report on conditions that may require new or different government initiatives; and to raise timely questions itself about questionable policies and the rationales presented for them. How well are the media fulfilling these weighty responsibilities? What are the impediments to their fulfillment?
This discussion is part of the Fourth Annual Fall Symposium of The Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities, entitled "No News is Bad News". The Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities promotes the use of history, literature, philosophy, and the other humanities disciplines to deepen our understanding of the issues of the day, strengthen our sense of common purpose, and enhance and improve civic life.

