Cape Town: come learn and network at the World Editors Forum
The events drew more than 1,700 participants to Moscow last year. They provide research, case studies, debate and discussion from all of the industry’s specialists. This is the first time the global meetings of the world press will be held in Africa.
Among the highlights of the World Editors Forum:
- An in-depth reflection about the future of journalism from Mario Vargas Llosa, of Peru, one of the world's leading novelists and essayists who began as a newspaper reporter.
- The first Newsroom Barometer, an international survey of senior news executives focused on editorial strategies, newsroom integration and the future of journalism.
- Some of the world's leading editors and newspaper professionals speaking on the wide variety of issues facing journalists everywhere.
- Numerous social events, breakfasts with South African leaders and other news making personalities, networking opportunities and more.
The theme of the Forum is "Quality Journalism in the Digital Age." Sessions include:
- "The Newsroom Barometer: How to Define Editorial Quality in the Digital Age," in which John Zogby, President of Zogby International, will present the Newsroom Barometer, a joint international survey by WEF, Zogby and Reuters. He will be joined in a panel discussion by editors from around the world. The session will be chaired by George Brock, Editor of the Saturday Times and President of the World Editors Forum.
- "The Multi-Newspaper Newsroom is Born," in which Andrea Seibel, Deputy Editor-in-chief of Die Welt, Welt Kompakt, Welt Am Sonntag and the Berliner Morgenpost in Germany, and Birgit Donker, Editor-in-chief of NRC Handelsblad and NRC Next in the Netherlands, will explain how they manage these multi-newspaper newsrooms. The session will be chaired by Xavier Vidal-Folch, Deputy Editor of El Pais in Spain.
- "Integrated newsrooms: what print does best and what online does best," which will examine several examples of merged print and online newsrooms. The session will feature Jonathan Landman, Deputy Managing Editor, and Jim Roberts, Editor of Digital News, at The New York Times, and Jennifer
Carroll, Vice President for New Media Content at the Gannett Company in the United States.
- In a "Reuters Master Class" on user-generated content, delegates will hear from Adam Pasick, the Reuters journalist whose beat is the Second Life virtual world. Other speakers in the session include Dave Panos, CEO of the social network Pluck (USA), Rebecca MacKinnon, Co-founder of the bloggers network Global Voices (USA), Didier Pillet, Director of Information for Ouest-France, and David Schlesinger, Editor-in-Chief of Reuters, who will chair the session.
- "Front Page versus Home Page: Design Lessons," which will examine how web-designed home pages are inspiring new designs for the front pages of print editions. The session will feature Don Wittekind, a leading
multimedia graphic design expert, now an Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina School of Journalism and the Poynter Institute of Media Studies, and Deborah Withey, Design Director at The Virginia Pilot in the United States.
- "Is It Possible to Cover Africa with One Correspondent," a session that will focus on providing better coverage of a continent of 900 million people and more than 50 countries. The session will feature Ferial Haffajee, Editor-in-chief of South Africa's Mail & Guardian, and other speakers to be announced.
- "Can Free Papers Produce Quality Journalism," which will look at the second and third generation of free papers that have emerged, including sports and economic titles and free home-delivered newspapers. The session will feature Ben Rogmans, Co-founder and future Editor-in-chief of Dagblad De Pers in the Netherlands, Toger Seidenfaden, Editor-in-chief of Politken in Denmark, and David Trads, Editor-in-chief of Denmark's Nyhedavisen.
- "Balancing Ethics, Transparency and Independence in the Newsroom," which will examine the impact of digital media on journalism ethics. Participants include Fritz van Exter, Editor-in-chief of Trouw in the Netherlands, François Nel, Director of the Journalism Leaders Programme at the Lancashire Business School in the United Kingdom, and Denis Muzet, Director of Mediascopie Institute in France.
- "Sharing Best Practices: Five Examples of Newspaper Cooperation, " which will provide editors with a range of new cooperative initiatives between newsrooms. The session will feature Marcel van Lingen, Editorial Director of the General Press Association in the Netherlands, a cooperative with 80 journalists that provides news to sixteen Dutch regional newspapers, Akishige Tada, Chairman of Press Net Japan (Zenkoku Simbun Net), a new national news website that is a joint project of more than 50 regional newspapers, and Grzegorz Piechota, Special Projects Editor at Gazeta Wyborcza in Poland.
Please also consult the online brochure.
Source: WEF / WAN
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It looks cool, and the flipping speed is good enough, but I have one usability problem with it - the font is too small for me to read comfortably and I haven't found a way to enlarge it.
I WOULD LIKE TO HAVE MORE INFO ABOUT THE WORLD NEWSPAPER CONGRESS IN CAPE TOWN. SPECIFICALLY FOR A ROOM FOR MEDIA AND JOURNALISM STUDENTS. I STUDY MEDIA AND JOURNALISM AT ROSEBANK COLLEGE AND HOW WILL I GET ACCESS TO THE EVENT. ARE WE STUDENT ALLOWED TO BE THERE? AND WHERE IN CAPE TOWN IS IT HELD.
I would like to know about the industry which makes the wordl like a small village whose people know each other and what happens at the other side of it in details, as journalism student i would like to attend if its allowed. thank you.