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Fri, July 18, 2008
Heading for the (bigger) hills
One of the little-known facts about LawBeat is that world headquarters is a log home, nestled in the woods several hundred yards off the road, in New York's lovely Finger Lakes region. If blogging actually paid the bills, it would be a pretty sweet gig. So why, you ask, do I need a vacation? In another woods-nestled log cabin, no less? Because the...
Posted at: 12:17:38PM
Fri, July 18, 2008
Greenhouse reader chat winds down
The New York Times
Today Linda Greenhouse is wrapping up her turn in the "Talk to the Newsroom" feature, and 40 years at...
Posted at: 12:13:25PM
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Your next assignment is a high-profile trial. Or the story of activists who are up in arms about a judge's recent decisions. Or that a grand jury is investigating a local sports figure.

How should you cover these stories without drowning in technical jargon or buying one side's spin on the facts? How do you turn the complexities of law — and whether the justice system actually works — into compelling stories that attract and serve readers and viewers?

This program is designed to help. We offer a new course, guest lectures, advice for students, a legal-journalism blog and other reporting and research resources.

The Legal Reporting Program is based at Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, and made possible by a grant from the Journalism Initiative of the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

Producing quality legal journalism matters because legal news regularly leads front pages and newscasts. . . . Because law touches on the most wrenching social and political issues, from abortion to capital punishment to national security. . . . Because public knowledge of the justice system and the rule of law is a cornerstone of our democracy. . . . Because law, lawyers, and the courts are too important to hide in the shadows — or to be misunderstood.

LEARN MORE about new courses and research or reporting help now available at Syracuse University.

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