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IRP and Washington Post collaborate
A two-part video series on Uganda is running on the Washingtonpost.com web site. The series is a collaboration between The Post and the International Reporting Project (IRP) from the recent “Gatekeeper Editors” trip. The series, “Seeds of Peace,”
IRP stories on Honduran illegal logging win NAHJ award
A series of stories by an International Reporting Project (IRP) Fellow on illegal logging in Honduras has won the National Association of Hispanic Journalists’ 2008 Guillermo Martinez-Marquez Award for Latin American Reporting. The award will be presented at the NAHJ’s annual “Noche de Triunfos” gala dinner in Washington D.C. in September to Eva Sanchis, who reported from Honduras in 2006 as an IRP Fellow. Sanchis’s stories ran in El Diario/La Prensa, a New York-based Spanish-language paper where she is the metro editor. As an IRP Fellow, Sanchis spent five weeks in Honduras reporting on Honduran groups who oppose the illegal exportation of lumber, mainly to the United States, by the logging companies. The resulting series, “War in the Honduran forests/Guerra en los bosques de Honduras,” was cited by the NAHJ judges as an “impressive package on such a critical issue facing Honduras . . . well-researched, with striking photography and strong graphics. The U.S. mainstream press has long ignored the plight of murdered Honduran environmentalists who died fighting to stop the illegal lumber trade.” Sanchis’s stories are available in Spanish and English on the IRP
"Training Journalists to Report Abroad"
John Schidlovsky, director of the International Reporting Project, was recently interviewed on Chicago Public Radio's WBEZ-FM on the topic of international reporting. He was interviewed by host Edie Rubinowitz, assistant professor of journalism at Northeastern Illinois University. 11 Senior News Editors and Producers Selected for IRP’s Gatekeeper Trip to Turkey
The International Reporting Project (IRP) has chosen 11 senior editors and producers from across the United States to participate in a 10-day trip to Turkey this September as part of the IRP’s annual “Gatekeeper Editors” fellowships. Each year the IRP selects two groups of “Gatekeeper Editors” to travel to an important country to learn more about critical global issues to help them improve their news organizations’ international coverage. Editors selected for the Turkey trip, scheduled for September 14-25, are: IRP Fellows for 2008 Program Announced Seven U.S. journalists have been awarded International Reporting Project (IRP) Fellowships in Washington D.C. for the 2008 program, including the first recipients of fellowships supported by the Stanley Foundation and the PBS program “FRONTLINE/World.” The eight-week fellowships, which are designed to encourage coverage of international issues by the U.S. news media, will begin in late August 2008. The 2008 IRP Fellows will report from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Japan, Mexico, Russia, South Africa and Sweden. The IRP Fellows, their affiliations and the countries from which they will report are: Stéphanie Giry, deputy managing editor, Foreign Affairs – Russia
12 Gatekeeper Editors travel to Uganda
Health, environment, agriculture and economic development issues were the main focus of a 10-day visit to Uganda by 12 senior U.S. editors and producers who participated in the IRP Gatekeeper Editors trip in May 2008. Uganda has long been a key country in global efforts to fight HIV/AIDS. During their visit, the Gatekeeper editors traveled to the Rakai Health Services Program in southwestern Uganda, a major overseas research facility of the National Institutes of Health, where researchers, including scientists from Johns Hopkins University, have been studying the HIV/AIDS virus for the past 20 years. They also witnessed firsthand how anti-retrovirals provided by the US-funded PEPFAR program have dramatically improved the lives of Ugandans infected with AIDS. more » Invisible Nation: How the Kurds' Quest for Statehood is Shaping Iraq and the Middle East Q&A with Quil Lawrence
On April 24, Quil Lawrence, Middle East correspondent for the BBC/PRI's "The World," came to Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) to discuss his new book "Invisible Nation: How the Kurds' Quest for Statehood is Shaping Iraq and the Middle East." The talk was sponsored by the IRP and the SAIS Middle East studies program. Afterwards Lawrence discussed the Kurds, what led him to write this book, and the war in Iraq. more » Former IRP Fellow's Documentary Film Debuts in Nashville
More than 1,800 people attended the world premiere on March 27, 2008, of former IRP Fellow Barry Simmons' new film, “Sons of Lwala,” a project he began work on during his trip to Kenya as a spring 2006 IRP Fellow. Simmons, a Nashville-based TV reporter, was honored at the gala event at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC) in Nashville, which was emceed by former Tennessee Senator Bill Frist and also featured performances by the musical group Jars of Clay.more »
International Reporting Project Visits North Korea on Gatekeepers' Trip Twelve senior U.S. editors and producers visited North Korea in November as part of the 10-day IRP Gatekeeper Editors trip to the Korean peninsula. more »
Inside North Korea
January 23, 2008 MOUNT KUMKANG, North Korea -- It was the end of the evening; our group of American editors had finished a traditional North Korean dinner of cold buckwheat-noodle soup and sliced wild boar that was barbecued at the table. As the waitresses cleared the dishes and prepared the restaurant for the next day's meals, the formality eased. The last customers of the night, we struck up conversations with the young servers as they cleaned the tables and ushered us into the adjacent bar for nightcaps. Some of them spoke a little English; we asked where they were from -- some said local villages, some the capital, Pyongyang -- and we shared wallet photos of spouses or children. more » Climate Change Fueling Malaria in Kenya, Experts Say
January 9, 2008 Tumutumu, Kenya - Esther Njoki lay on a slender cot in the women's ward of Tumutumu Hospital, lucid for the first time in days after being ambushed by fever and delirium. The emaciated 80-year-old had survived a bout of malaria, but her doctor said it nearly killed her. Malaria has long been endemic to Kenya's humid coast and swampy lowland regions, but it has only rarely reached Njoki's village on the slopes of Mount Kenya (see Kenya map). In recent decades, however, scientists have noted an increase in epidemics in the region, as well as in sporadic cases like Njoki's. more » Iceland's Geothermal University
December 28, 2007 Iceland is a leader when it comes to tapping the energy potential of underground hot springs and steam. The United Nations wants other to learn how it's done. So it's set up a research center in Iceland for experts from developing nations to study geothermal energy. Coal Mine Mixed Blessing for Indians
December 16, 2007 Five years ago, students at the Jesus Carrera Bolivarian elementary school dragged desks past their playground to a dusty road used by trucks laden with coal from a nearby state-owned mine. "We wanted to tell the coal company that we needed a school building," recalled Yacelis Hernandez, a teacher at the school, who pointed to her former classroom - a palm-thatched gazebo a few hundred yards away. The coal company, Carbones de la Guajira, a subsidiary of the state-owned oil company, PDVSA, soon agreed to build the school's concrete building for 150 students, most of whom are Wayuu Indians living in the remote Guajira Peninsula near the Colombian border. "Carbones de la Guajira has been good to us," said Hernandez. more »
The International Reporting Project is grateful for support from The International Reporting Project is based at The Johns Hopkins Copyright © 2007 International Reporting Project. All Rights Reserved. |
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