All Stories

  1. Investigative Journalism in a Networked Age
  2. From Silence to Primary Definer: The Emergence of an Intelligence Lobby in the Public Sphere
  3. How the Met missed the rise of organised crime in Hatton Garden. A Lashmar/Hobbs paper
  4. How spies cause the death of journalists
  5. Just move to a bigger flat
  6. Facts and figuresData Journalism: Inside the Global Future, by FelleTom, MairJohn and RadcliffeDamian (Abramis Academic Publishing, 2015, pp307, £19.95)
  7. Revelations by Snowden have grave implications for journalists' source protection.
  8. User Experience (UX) of Heritage Journeys: Design Taxonomy for Quality Measurement
  9. Jean Seaton,Pinkoes and Traitor: The BBC and the Nation 1974–1987(London: Profile Books, 2015), pp. 384, ISBN 978 1 84668 4746 (hb), £30.
  10. Cuckoo in a nest of spies
  11. Book review: Dick Hobbs, Lush Life: Constructing Organised Crime in the UKHobbsDick, Lush Life: Constructing Organised Crime in the UK, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013; 328pp. ISBN: 978-0-1996-6828-1, £65.00 (hbk)
  12. How to humiliate and shame: a reporter's guide to the power of the mugshot
  13. Urinal or conduit? Institutional information flow between the UK intelligence services and the news media
  14. Book review: Robert Dover and Michael S. Goodman (eds) Spinning Intelligence: Why Intelligence Needs the Media, Why the Media Needs Intelligence London: Hurst & Co, 2009. 265 pp. £15.99 (pbk) ISBN 978 1850659945
  15. Investigative Journalism
  16. Paul Lashmar and James Oliver, Britain's Secret Propaganda War. Stroud: Sutton Publishing Company, 1998. 223 pp. £25.00.