Making News
The Political Economy of Journalism in Britain and America from the Glorious Revolution to the Internet
Edited by Richard R. John and Jonathan Silberstein-Loeb
Author Information
Richard R. John is a Professor of History and Communications at Columbia Journalism School, Columbia University. He is a historian who specializes in the history of business, technology, communications, and American political development. He teaches and advises graduate students in Columbia's Ph.D. program in communications, and is member of the core faculty of the Columbia history department, where he teaches courses on the history of capitalism and the history of communications.
Jonathan Silberstein-Loeb is sometime Senior Lecturer in History at Keble College and pupil barrister. After completing a PhD at the University of Cambridge, he became Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Oxford along with a research fellowship focused on the business of news at Oxford's Said Business School. Silberstein-Loeb's developing interest in law and business then led to an LLB at City University Law School in London and an LLM at NYU Law.
Contributors:
Joseph M. Adelman, Framingham State University
James L. Baughman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
James R. Brennan, University of Illinois
Victoria E. M. Gardner, University of Edinburgh
Richard R. John, Columbia University
David Paul Nord, Indiana University
Robert G. Picard, University of Oxford
Heidi J. S. Tworek, Harvard University
Jonathan Silberstein-Loeb, Inner Temple
Will Slauter, Universite Paris 8
Michael Stamm, Michigan State University