Bugeja: Are we forgetting the role of civic virtues?
Distinguished Professor Michael Bugeja shares his opinion on American civic virtues.
Distinguished Professor Michael Bugeja shares his opinion on American civic virtues.
In this piece published by Poynter, Distinguished Professor Michael Bugeja shares what online migration due to the COVID-19 pandemic looks like for professors.
Distinguished Professor Michael Bugeja shares how his students create their own “Ethical Heraldry” to represent their personal and professional ethics.
Before the first Democratic debate, guest blogger and Greenlee School Professor Daniela Dimitrova discusses social media and the Iowa Caucuses on the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics’ Navigating Gender in Iowa blog.
Director Angela Powers and First Amendment Specialist Julie Roosa spoke with Justin Surrency of WHO-TV about the new Iowa First Amendment law and Iowa State University’s upcoming First Amendment Days celebration.
During this Iowa Public Radio River to River segment, host Ben Kieffer talks with professor Michael Bugeja, who teaches media ethics in the Greenlee School, about how journalists should respond in an era of open hostility toward the media and how he makes the case to the next generation to pursue journalism as a career.
Professor Michael Bugeja’s op-ed appeared in the Des Moines Register.
Kelly Winfrey, assistant professor and interim director of the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women in Politics, was quoted in The Gazette story about the first Iowa women elected to the U.S. House.
This story by Manichanh Naonady, a senior studying journalism and mass communication at Iowa State University, appeared on Iowa Public Radio. It was among those submitted for a Greenlee journalism class and provides another view of the 2018 midterm elections.
In an interview with Justin Surrency of WHO-HD, Greenlee Professor Michael Bugeja discusses fringe groups on social media and increasing incivility.