Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

[caption id="attachment_13795" align="alignright" width="250"]Errol Salamon Researcher Errol Salamon[/caption]

Did you work as a journalism intern in Canada or the United States between 2013 and 2017? Researcher Errol Salamon would like to hear about your experiences for a textbook on labour issues facing media workers in North America.

Salamon is the work and labour editor of J-Source, and a visiting research scholar at the University of Pennsylvania. He's creating the textbook and accompanying curriculum materials for use in college and university journalism, communications, media studies, cultural studies, sociology, and labour studies classes in Canada and the United States.

If you're interested in participating in his research, your identity will be kept confidential. Your responses will become part of a book-length account of the working conditions and labour issues facing North American media workers, including interns, freelancers, and digital media workers.

Salamon is interested in hearing about what was beneficial and what could've been improved about your journalism internships. Willing subjects are asked to complete this short introductory questionnaire. Once you've completed the survey you'll be contacted to set up a time for a short phone interview.

This project is supported by CWA Canada, the Canadian Media Guild's parent union. It aims to  raise awareness about media workers' rights and determine best practices for quality journalism in a digital age.

Did you work as a journalism intern at a media company in Canada or the United States between 2013 and 2016? Researcher Errol Salamon would like to hear about your experiences. He's working on a research project on journalism internships, and is interested in hearing about what was beneficial and what could have been improved about your…
This post is the eighth in a series called “E-Lancer Writes,” exploring the working conditions, rights, and collective organizing strategies of freelance journalists, interns, and other low-wage or temporary digital media workers. By Errol SalamonEntry-level media workers can confirm that some journalism internships aren’t as glamorous…
Did you work a media internship this summer... or in the recent past? We'd like to hear about your experiences. Errol Salamon is a freelance writer and the work and labour editor of J-Source. He's also the author of a series of columns on Story Board called E-Lancer Writes. For his next column, Errol is planning to explore media internships in…
by Sara Tatelman  [caption id="attachment_11752" align="alignright" width="340"] Photo by Cynthia Pandev from the film Pay Your Interns![/caption]When Ross Perlin told his grandparents about his first internship, they thought he was becoming  a doctor. And fair enough—until the 1970s, the word “intern” primarily referred to freshly minted…
Do you think interns ought to be paid for their work? So do we! Come and join us for a screening of the film Pay Your Interns! on March 12 in Toronto.The event was organized by filmmaker, Cynthia H. Pandev, who is also hosting the evening. The film screening will be followed by a lecture from Intern Nation author Ross Perlin as well as panel…
by Lisa Ferguson [caption id="attachment_11273" align="alignright" width="357"] A panel discussion with CWA Canada President Martin O'Hanlon at the Media Workers Forum on November 14. Photo by Aloke Anand[/caption]At a time when unpaid internships prevail and precarious employment seems the norm, how should institutions better protect interns,…
CWA Canada is planning to livestream a panel discussion on internships that's happening tomorrow as part of their Media Workers Forum for students, volunteers and precarious media workers. If you'd like to watch that discussion, you can tune in right here starting tomorrow at 11:30 a.m. EST.And if you're in Toronto, there's still time to…
Unpaid work has become increasingly normalized over the past few years. Internships are seen as valuable opportunities that offer a way for workers -- especially younger ones -- to break into many different industries. But they are also insecure, lacking in oversight and potentially exploitative. Where should we draw the line on unpaid…
Toronto panel discusses why, despite crackdowns, unpaid internships remain all too common.    [caption id="attachment_11151" align="alignright" width="283"] Despite outcry over unpaid internships, people continue to debate their merits. Screenshot by J-Source.[/caption]By Marielle Torrefranca  The past few years have seen a crackdown on…

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