In 2020 she was awarded a British Academy Small Research Grant to research the work of Alistair Cooke, having gained the first permission to access both the Cooke family archives and the BBC archives into his work.ĭr Cooper is also interested in the new field of 'live journalism' - the interaction of journalism and theatre and is working on a News On Stage project with Catherine Adams at Nottingham Trent University. Second, it aims to study the impact of artificial intelligence on newswork and journalists. The objective of the DMINR project is twofold: first it wants to create a tool for news research and verification based on artificial intelligence to help journalists work with big data and conduct investigations in the digital era. She is currently working on a book with Prof Suzanne Franks about turning points in humanitarian coverage, due out 2021.ĭr Cooper is also currently co-investigator on the DMINR project funded by the Google Digital News Initiative and which is a collaboration between the journalism department and Human-Computer Interaction Design (HCID) department. This resulted in her monograph 'Reporting Humanitarian Crises in a Social Media Age' (Routledge, 2018), the edited collection 'Humanitarianism, Communication and Change' (Peter Lang, 2015) with Prof Simon Cottle as well as a project into UK media coverage of refugees post the 2015 crisis with her colleagues Dr Lindsey Blumell and Dr Mel Bunce. International agents and representativesĭr Glenda Cooper is a senior lecturer at City, University of London, who began her academic career specialising in coverage of humanitarian crises and the use of user-generated content.School of Health & Psychological Sciences.Job prospects and graduate destinations.Placements, internships and employment opportunities.Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer plus.
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