Right to be Forgotten policy discussed on panel held by News Leaders Association and Reynolds Journalism Institute Cameron Fields, cleveland.com, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio The journalism industry’s movement of helping people move on from past mistakes is growing, with more newsrooms deciding to adopt policies where they unpublish or tweak stories from the past that are negatively affecting people’s lives in the present.
Cleveland.com remains a national leader in this movement, and editor Chris Quinn joined a virtual panel of news leaders Friday to discuss unpublishing and cleveland.com’s Right to be Forgotten policy.
The panel was hosted by the News Leaders Association and the Reynolds Journalism Institute, and Quinn spoke alongside Margaret Holt of The Chicago Tribune, Greg Lee Jr. of The Boston Globe and Alison Gerber of The Chattanooga Times Free Press. Deborah Dwyer, a Reynolds Journalism Institute fellow, moderated the event.
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Based at the Carolina Population Center, Add Health is the nation s largest most comprehensive long-term study of adolescents from across the country. The study began with more than 20,000 adolescents surveyed in 1994-95. Since then, data have been collected about their educational experiences, employment, children and parenting, genetics and health.
The new grants will enable researchers to follow the group into their 40s, and better understand how early life - during adolescence and young adulthood - matters for health and well-being in middle age and beyond.
UNC-Chapel Hill professor Kathleen Mullan Harris directed Add Health from 2004-2021 and this year UNC-Chapel Hill professors Robert Hummer and Allison Aiello assume leadership.
Billboard and Storefront Ads for Cannabis Linked to Problematic Use in Teens
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PISCATAWAY, N.J., April 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Adolescents who frequently see billboard or storefront advertisements for recreational cannabis are more likely to use the drug weekly and to have symptoms of a cannabis use disorder, according to a new study in the
Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.
Despite use being illegal for those below age 21 even in states that have approved recreational marijuana, legalization may alter the ways that youth use cannabis, write the study authors, led by Pamela J. Trangenstein, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.