By Josh Wolf
The Engagement Hub has been collecting links that exploring how various news outlets are approaching community engagement following the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
- Saint Louis area news leaders share their experiences with Poynter
- Brian Thouvenot, news director of KMOV-TV
- Gilbert Bailon, editor-in-chief of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Joe Lamie, managing editor of KTVI
- Margaret Wolf Freivogel, editor of St. Louis Public Radio
- Chris King, editorial director of The St. Louis American
- Chad Garrison, editor of the Riverfront Times
- What could social journalism do for Ferguson? — Jeff Jarvis
- Philadelphia Daily News changes its cover after it’s criticized on Twitter — Romenesko
- Journalists fight through tear gas, sirens, smoke to report on Ferguson — Poynter
- During protests, police may balance journalists’ rights with public safety — Poynter
- 10 tips for filming protests, demonstrations & police conduct — Future Journalism Project
- Ferguson and the power of a free internet — Nieman Journalism Lab
- St. Louis photographer on scene at riots: ‘This is my job’ — Poynter
- Local TV journalists say police encounters are mixed in Ferguson — Poynter
- Tweets and Vines change Ferguson Coverage — On the Media
- Crowd-powered journalism becomes crucial when traditional media is unwilling or unable — GigaOm
- How social media freed reporters Wesley Lowery and Ryan Reilly from Ferguson police — The Washington Post
- How news of #Ferguson spread across Twitter — Cyberjournalist.net
- #IfTheyGunnedMeDown challenges the media and how it portrays people of color — Poynter
- Ferguson is more than a hashtag — Poynter
- Could more newsroom diversity help coverage of the Michael Brown killing? — The Root
- White racial attitudes over time: Data from the General Social Survey — Journalist’s Resource
- Police brutality or “reasonable force?” Research review and statistics on law enforcement, violence and the role of race — Journalist’s Resource