Daniel Bruce (born 1981) is a British journalist, broadcaster and international development worker. Since 2008, Bruce has worked for the international organisation, Internews, which builds the capacity and sustainability of independent media in developing countries. In February 2014, he was appointed the organisation’s Chief Executive in Europe.
Bruce spent his early career working as a journalist, newsreader and presenter for local and regional radio networks in the UK. He worked for various independent commercial radio groups, most notably the Lincs FM Group and CN Group.
From 2006-2008, he served as the CN Radio Group’s first Regional Editor, overseeing a network of newsrooms across various local radio stations, including the Touch FM Network, now owned by Quidem.
In this role, Bruce was responsible for setting up one of the earlier regionalised ‘news hubs’ in the commercial radio sector. All news bulletin and programme production was merged into one central site in Coventry, leaving satellite reporters to produce content from their respective coverage areas. Under his editorship, the networked team were finalists in the ‘News Team of the Year’ category at the European Radio Awards in 2007.
Bruce spoke of the editorial and economic benefits of this, often controversial, model when giving evidence to the House of Lords Communications Committee in 2008. Some years later, Bruce reflected that "the economic and regulatory model of ‘small-scale, alternative location’ broadcasting licences [had been] strained from the outset" in response to a wave of closures of such stations.
Bruce left the UK commercial radio sector in 2008 to join Internews as its Country Director in Uganda. He cited a growing interest in international affairs and the important role of local media in poor or fragile countries for this apparent change of career direction.
In Uganda, he ran Internews’ ‘Reporting for Peace’ project where journalists from various community radio stations were taught skills in conflict sensitive reporting in the wake of the civil war with the Lord’s Resistance Army. The project was funded by the United States Agency for International Development.
Bruce went on to run a similar project in Kenya and Nigeria before undertaking a variety of programme design and fundraising roles for Internews, and other similar organisations, around the world.