- Home
- My Stuff
- News
- People
- Programme
- Places
- Community
- Contact
- Conference Handbook
- Blogs
- Forums
- Galleries
- Images from Sunday June 28
- Images from Monday June 29
- Editors talk about science
- Embargoes in Science
- Gala Reception
- General photos
- Monday's Workshop
- Plenary Science Policy
- Reporting Climate Change
- Science Centres
- Science, High Brow?
- Sunday night meeting
- WCSJ 09 July 2
- WFSJ General Assembly
- Welcoming Reception
- Media Reception
- Jobs offered
- Reference documents
- Weblinks
26. Embargoes in science reporting: Friend or foe?
Submitted by Horacio Salazar on Sun, 2009-05-31 12:04
Strand:
Biomedical Strand
Website:
Wellcome Trust Few issues provoke such impassioned debate as the issue of Embargoes in science reporting. Some science journalists are increasingly angry about what they see as ever more draconian sanctions on journalists for minor infringements of embargoes. Some others are angry that that science journals are wrongly labelling genuine scoops as embargo breaks and thus imposing unjustified sanctions. Science Press officers are angry that journalists complain about embargoes when the embargo is their property and one of the very few aspects of control they have over the story coming from their institution/journal. And now a leading US academic has written a book arguing that the entire system is having a corrupting influence on investigative and critical journalism and science journalists should collectively withdraw from the embargo agreements with journal publishers. In the spirit of the WCSJ, Fiona Fox has brought together all sides of this lively and passionate debate to have no holds barred discussion of all the issues involved..wear a hard hat!
Multimedia files
You are missing some Flash content that should appear here! Perhaps your browser cannot display it, or maybe it did not initialize correctly.
Session reviews:
