Senior Vice President and Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll explains the thinking behind the decision: The Stylebook no longer sanctions the term 「illegal immigrant」 or the use of 「illegal」 to ...
The Associated Press today released the 2014 Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law, which includes about 200 new or revised entries plus a separate chapter with more than 200 religion ...
NEW YORK – The AP Stylebook has earned a seat at the kitchen table. Beginning today, The Associated Press is making available the print edition of the 2011 AP Stylebook with a new Food Guidelines ...
The Associated Press Stylebook released guidance on social media advising publishers to put the word "woke" in quotation marks due to the word's "derogatory" use by conservatives. "A slang term that ...
It's "esports" folks, not "e-sports" or "eSports," and that's final. In case you missed it, The Associated Press has weighed in on how exactly to spell the term we use to describe League of Legends, ...
The AP Stylebook has received positive reception for its updated weapons entry that includes a detailed description of how journalists should refer to guns. The AP Stylebook, updated annually, is ...
The pandemic gave us a new vocabulary to describe everyday life — Zoom, anyone? — and editors at the Associated Press Stylebook have been working to keep up. AP first published its coronavirus topical ...
The Associated Press will no longer use "illegal immigrant." April 2, 2013— -- The Associated Press, the largest news-gathering outlet in the world, will no longer use the term "illegal immigrant ...
The Associated Press Stylebook, a widely used manual of journalistic writing standards, has made a shift in the use of the pronoun “they” to acknowledge the evolving landscape of gender identity. The ...