Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 195 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 195 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...View all 195 references Web References
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1. Media
www.canwestglobal.com/media/vi - [Cached]Published on: 3/25/2008 Last Visited: 4/19/2008
"We're proud of our newspapers and their efforts to defend journalistic principles, arguing in cases that range from access to information, challenges to publication bans, and the rigorous defence of freedom of expression," said Scott Anderson, Senior Vice President, Content, Canwest Publishing. -
2. April 14, 2005 - Cross-media ownership 'natural business strategy' by Joe Paraskevas
www.friends.ca/News/Friends_Ne - [Cached]Published on: 4/14/2005 Last Visited: 4/30/2005
Ottawa Citizen editor-in-chief Scott Anderson, who is also vice-president of CanWest Media Works, said limiting the number of foreign-based reporters was economical. Reporters in Canada could become experts in subjects related to foreign affairs and travel as required, Mr. Anderson said.
Liberal Senator Jim Munson, a former CTV reporter, challenged Mr. Anderson's position.
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Mr. Anderson said the arrangement, as well as the advent of the Internet as a news source, meant "Canadian Press is becoming less and less relevant over time. -
3. Board of Directors
www.rohcg.on.ca/roh-internet/w - [Cached]Published on: 12/18/2005 Last Visited: 12/18/2005
Scott Anderson is Editor of The Ottawa Citizen. He obtained his BA in Urban Geography in 1986 at the University of Toronto. Mr. Anderson worked briefly for the Ontario Geological Survey before becoming a reporter for the Thunder Bay Chronicle-Journal. He moved to Ottawa in 1990 and worked as Associate Editor for Ottawa Business News. In 1991, he joined the Kingston Whig-Standard as night news editor. In 1993, Mr. Anderson moved to Saint John, New Brunswick and was managing editor of the Telegraph Journal, the provincial paper that won the first-ever Canadian Journalism Foundation's Excellence in Journalism Award. He has been in Ottawa since 1997.

