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The Pulitzer Prizes 2020 Winne
WINNERS AND FINALISTS 1917 TO PRESENT TABLE OF CONTENTS Excerpts from the Plan of Award ..............................................................2 PULITZER PRIZES IN JOURNALISM Public Service ...........................................................................................6 Reporting ...............................................................................................24 Local Reporting .....................................................................................27 Local Reporting, Edition Time ..............................................................32 Local General or Spot News Reporting ..................................................33 General News Reporting ........................................................................36 Spot News Reporting ............................................................................38 Breaking News Reporting .....................................................................39 Local Reporting, No Edition Time .......................................................45 Local Investigative or Specialized Reporting .........................................47 Investigative Reporting ..........................................................................50 Explanatory Journalism .........................................................................61 Explanatory Reporting ...........................................................................64 Specialized Reporting .............................................................................70 -
Central America and the Bitter Fruit of U.S. Policy by Bill Gentile
CLALS WORKING PAPER SERIES | NO. 23 Central America and the Bitter Fruit of U.S. Policy by Bill Gentile OCTOBER 2019 Pullquote Bill Gentile in Nicaragua in the mid-1980s / Courtesy Bill Gentile Bill Gentile is a Senior Professorial Lecturer and Journalist in Residence at American University’s School of Communication. An independent journalist and documentary filmmaker whose career spans four decades, five continents, and nearly every facet of journalism and mass communication, he is the winner of two national Emmy Awards and was nominated for two others. He is a pioneer of “backpack video journalism” and the director, executive producer, and host of the documentary series FREELANCERS with Bill Gentile. He teaches Photojournalism, Foreign Correspondence, and Backpack Documentary. TheCenter for Latin American & Latino Studies (CLALS) at American University, established in January 2010, is a campus- wide initiative advancing and disseminating state-of-the-art research. The Center’s faculty affiliates and partners are at the forefront of efforts to understand economic development, democratic governance, cultural diversity and change, peace and diplomacy, health, education, and environmental well-being. CLALS generates high-quality, timely analysis on these and other issues in partnership with researchers and practitioners from AU and beyond. A previous version of this piece was published by the Daily Beast as a series, available here. Cover photo: Courtesy Bill Gentile 2 AU CENTER FOR LATIN AMERIcaN & LATINO STUDIES | CHAPTER TITLE HERE Contents -
The Full Policy Paper Is Available for Download
Table of Contents About the Authors ................................................................................................................................... 2 Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................................. 3 Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................ 4 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 8 Chapter 1. US Foreign Policy and Atrocity Prevention .......................................................................... 11 Chapter 2. Atrocity Prevention Policy Tools and Policy Advances from 2012 to 2016 ......................... 33 Chapter 3. Country Cases ..................................................................................................................... 44 Burundi .............................................................................................................................................. 44 Central African Republic .................................................................................................................... 55 Democratic Republic of the Congo .................................................................................................... 64 Iraq ................................................................................................................................................... -
Chapter 13 in the Best Interest of the Child: International Regulation of Transnational Corporations *
HARNESSING GLOBALISATION FOR CHILDREN: A report to UNICEF Chapter 13 In the best interest of the child: International regulation of transnational corporations * Judith Richter with Elizabeth Satow** Summary: This chapter uses two case studies to demonstrate the urgent need for international regulation of transnational corporations. Its examination of the processes of regulation of marketing for breastmilk substitutes and for regulating tobacco provides an overview of the historical process of regulations. Both industries have used aggressive advertising to promote their products and have withheld information that would have helped consumers make informed choices about these products. What is particularly noteworthy about these sectors is that their advertising has an impact on human health. They have used similar tactics to prevent and obstruct global regulation, including the gathering of information on opponents, threats of violence, the use of consultants to undermine the work of the World Health Organization and trade threats made via governments. The current international system is skewed towards free trade – not human well-being. For this reason there is a need for strong and enforceable external regulation for industries whose products can harm public health. Self-regulation, and co-regulation, are not enough. JEL: D18, F23, I18, K32 * This study presents the views of its authors and not the official UNICEF position in this field. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This is chapter 13 of the overall study “Harnessing Globalisation for Children” edited by Giovanni Andrea Cornia ** Elizabeth Satow adapted much of this chapter from Judith Richter, Holding Corporations: Accountable Corporate Conduct, International Codes, and Citizen Action (in press). Zed Books. The section on tobacco was researched and written by Elizabeth Satow. -
New England Aquarium Dive Club, Inc. Newsletter
NEW ENGLAND AQUARIUM DIVE CLUB, INC. NEWSLETTER April 2006 NEADC Website: www.NEADC.org NEADC GENERAL MEETING NEXT INFORMAL MEETINGS Conference Center at New England Aquarium Wednesday May 3, 2006, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 19, 2006, 6:30 PM The Home of Tom and Tina Kemper, 3 Lawrence Rd, Wayland, MA Shipwrecks of Massachusetts Bay and Phone: (508)655-0546 Stellwagen Bank Directions: From Route 95/128, take Route 30 West (Exit There are thousands of shipwrecks located in next to Mass Pike Exit). Follow Route 30 West for 5 miles to a fork in the road (there is a Mobil station on the left and a Massachusetts Bay and the Gulf of Maine - Sunoco station on the right). Bear right onto East Plain shipwrecks that can keep diving explorers busy for Street (past Villa Restaurant). Take second right onto a lifetime. Join us for a review of the 2005 Pollock Street. Follow to the end and take a left onto Willow shipwreck diving season, as we share our Lane. Take the first right onto Lawrence Road. #3 is the second house on the right. discoveries and experiences exploring our New England's maritime history. Includes shipwrecks in Mass Bay and Stellwagen Bank at technical and SHORE DIVE PLANNING MEETING recreational depths. Wednesday, April 12, 2006 at 6:30PM The Annual Shore Dive Planning meeting will be held at Captain Heather Knowles and Captain David Jose McIntyre’s, in Boston! Caldwell are co-founders of Northern Atlantic Dive To be a shore dive leader you don’t have to be an experienced diver, instructor or divemaster. -
Seattle a Digital Community Still in Transition Jessica Durkin, Tom Glaisyer, and Kara Hadge, Media Policy Initiative June 2010, Release 2.0
New America Foundation An Information Community Case Study: Seattle A digital community still in transition Jessica Durkin, Tom Glaisyer, and Kara Hadge, Media Policy Initiative June 2010, Release 2.0 Seattle, Washington, could be considered a city singularly suited to develop a healthy democracy in the digital age. The city government, citizens and business have created a productive environment for the next generation of information-sharing and community engagement. Years of economic growth and relative prosperity have fostered new, superior practices in news and information. Yet, losing a major print newspaper, as Seattle did when The Seattle Post-Intelligencer closed, adversely affects a community, by leaving it with one less place to provide public service journalism, stories about people and general community updates. In parallel, Seattle has been at the center of an explosion of alternative news outlets, especially online, which has created a critical mass of information portals for geographic and social communities. As the Knight Report, Informing Communities: Sustaining Democracy in a Digital Age, highlights, it is important to understand that there are three important elements to be considered as we analyze media and democracy in the 21st century: • availability of relevant and credible information to all Americans and their communities; • capacity of individuals to engage with information; and • individual engagement with information and the public life of the community. However, despite the relative vibrancy of the media scene, and even with all its demographic and other advantages, it is unclear how much of this innovation is sustainable. The local web is littered with websites that are no longer updated, and few of the startups boast anything like the journalistic firepower or profitability of the papers of the past. -
S:\FULLCO~1\HEARIN~1\Committee Print 2018\Henry\Jan. 9 Report
Embargoed for Media Publication / Coverage until 6:00AM EST Wednesday, January 10. 1 115TH CONGRESS " ! S. PRT. 2d Session COMMITTEE PRINT 115–21 PUTIN’S ASYMMETRIC ASSAULT ON DEMOCRACY IN RUSSIA AND EUROPE: IMPLICATIONS FOR U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY A MINORITY STAFF REPORT PREPARED FOR THE USE OF THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED FIFTEENTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION JANUARY 10, 2018 Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Relations Available via World Wide Web: http://www.gpoaccess.gov/congress/index.html U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE 28–110 PDF WASHINGTON : 2018 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Publishing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2104 Mail: Stop IDCC, Washington, DC 20402–0001 VerDate Mar 15 2010 04:06 Jan 09, 2018 Jkt 000000 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 5012 Sfmt 5012 S:\FULL COMMITTEE\HEARING FILES\COMMITTEE PRINT 2018\HENRY\JAN. 9 REPORT FOREI-42327 with DISTILLER seneagle Embargoed for Media Publication / Coverage until 6:00AM EST Wednesday, January 10. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS BOB CORKER, Tennessee, Chairman JAMES E. RISCH, Idaho BENJAMIN L. CARDIN, Maryland MARCO RUBIO, Florida ROBERT MENENDEZ, New Jersey RON JOHNSON, Wisconsin JEANNE SHAHEEN, New Hampshire JEFF FLAKE, Arizona CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware CORY GARDNER, Colorado TOM UDALL, New Mexico TODD YOUNG, Indiana CHRISTOPHER MURPHY, Connecticut JOHN BARRASSO, Wyoming TIM KAINE, Virginia JOHNNY ISAKSON, Georgia EDWARD J. MARKEY, Massachusetts ROB PORTMAN, Ohio JEFF MERKLEY, Oregon RAND PAUL, Kentucky CORY A. BOOKER, New Jersey TODD WOMACK, Staff Director JESSICA LEWIS, Democratic Staff Director JOHN DUTTON, Chief Clerk (II) VerDate Mar 15 2010 04:06 Jan 09, 2018 Jkt 000000 PO 00000 Frm 00002 Fmt 5904 Sfmt 5904 S:\FULL COMMITTEE\HEARING FILES\COMMITTEE PRINT 2018\HENRY\JAN. -
SCMS 2019 Conference Program
CELEBRATING SIXTY YEARS SCMS 1959-2019 SCMSCONFERENCE 2019PROGRAM Sheraton Grand Seattle MARCH 13–17 Letter from the President Dear 2019 Conference Attendees, This year marks the 60th anniversary of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies. Formed in 1959, the first national meeting of what was then called the Society of Cinematologists was held at the New York University Faculty Club in April 1960. The two-day national meeting consisted of a business meeting where they discussed their hope to have a journal; a panel on sources, with a discussion of “off-beat films” and the problem of renters returning mutilated copies of Battleship Potemkin; and a luncheon, including Erwin Panofsky, Parker Tyler, Dwight MacDonald and Siegfried Kracauer among the 29 people present. What a start! The Society has grown tremendously since that first meeting. We changed our name to the Society for Cinema Studies in 1969, and then added Media to become SCMS in 2002. From 29 people at the first meeting, we now have approximately 3000 members in 38 nations. The conference has 423 panels, roundtables and workshops and 23 seminars across five-days. In 1960, total expenses for the society were listed as $71.32. Now, they are over $800,000 annually. And our journal, first established in 1961, then renamed Cinema Journal in 1966, was renamed again in October 2018 to become JCMS: The Journal of Cinema and Media Studies. This conference shows the range and breadth of what is now considered “cinematology,” with panels and awards on diverse topics that encompass game studies, podcasts, animation, reality TV, sports media, contemporary film, and early cinema; and approaches that include affect studies, eco-criticism, archival research, critical race studies, and queer theory, among others. -
Inside the ASA Operating Budget and Invested Assets Mary Romero, Arizona State University Footnotes
Volume 44 • Number 1 • January 2016 Report of the ASA Secretary on ASA Finances: inside The ASA Operating Budget and Invested Assets Mary Romero, Arizona State University Footnotes. In these reports we use from membership and from the and ASA Secretary the most recent ASA fifnancial data ASA journals are, and have long 3 Authors of Rose Series SA secretaries regularly report to that has been audited by an outside been, the two largest sources of the Book Win Grawemeyer the membership about the status auditing fifrm. For this report, the Association’s income (33%, 35% A most recent audited data are for respectively), together making up Alexander, Olson, and of ASA’s fifnances. I do this semian- 2014. The 2015 audited data will be about two-thirds of the Association’s Entwisle receive the nually by publishing the minutes of available ater Council acts on the annual revenue. An additional 20 Grawemeyer Award in the ASA Council meetings at which audit in August 2016. percent of revenues in 2014 came Education for The Long Council reviews and acts upon the from the Annual Meeting, 6 percent Shadow. annual operating budget and our ASA’s Operating Budget: from the sale of other publications, invested reserves. I also post the Revenues and Expenditures in and 6 percent from “other revenues” Memories of Florian annual audit on the ASA website. 2014 5 The Executive Office publishes an that included rental income from Znaniecki Where does the Association’s ASA office space. More detail on ASA Annual Report just before income come from? How much The daughter of a University these categories follows. -
BEAT BASICS by Veteran Business Journalists
BEAT BASICS by veteran business journalists COMPILED BY THE DONALD W. REYNOLDS NATIONAL CENTER FOR BUSINESS JOURNALISM Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism Beat Basics © Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business JournalismAll RiGhts Reserved, except where otherwise noted CONTENTS Introduction by Reynolds Center Director Micheline Maynard 1 PART I. COVERING AGRICULTURE 1. CoverinG the AGriculture Beat: An Introduction 5 2. CoverinG AGriculture: IdentifyinG Local Stories, AnGles 7 3. CoverinG AGriculture: ChallenGes 9 4. CoverinG AGriculture: Resources and SourcinG 11 5. CoverinG AGriculture: Glossary of Terms, Concepts 13 PART II. COVERING BUSINESS: AN INTRODUCTION 6. CoverinG Business: An Introduction 23 7. CoverinG Business: FindinG Local Stories 25 8. CoverinG Business: Resources and ReadinG 27 PART III. COVERING COMPANIES: A GUIDE TO SEC DATABASES 9. 10-K FilinGs Guide: Introduction 31 10. 10-Q FilinGs Guide: Introduction 33 11. 8-K FilinGs Guide: Introduction 35 PART IV. COVERING ECONOMICS 12. How to Cover Economics: An introduction 41 13. CoverinG Economics: Glossary 42 14. CoverinG Economics: FindinG Local Stories in the Data 44 15. CoverinG Economics: Common Mistakes 46 16. CoverinG Economics: Resources 48 PART V. COVERING ENERGY, UTILITIES AND MINING 17. Covering Energy, Utilities and MininG: An Introduction 53 18. Covering Energy, Utilities and MininG: IdentifyinG Local Stories 55 19. Covering Energy, Utilities and MininG: ChallenGes and Hurdles 57 20. Covering Energy, Utilities and MininG: Resources 59 21. Covering Energy, Utilities and MininG: Glossary 61 PART VI. COVERING SUSTAINABILITY 22. Covering Sustainability: An Introduction 65 23. Covering Sustainability: IdentifyinG Local Stories 67 24. Covering Sustainability: ChallenGes and Hurdles 69 25. -
Download Program Abstract
Conservation Strategies: Matching Science and Management THE 2007 HAWAI‘I CONSERVATION CONFERENCE Conservation Strategies: Matching Science and Management July 25-27, 2007 Hawai‘i Convention Center, Honolulu, Hawai‘i Sponsored by the Hawai‘i Conservation Alliance (HCA) Welcome to the 15th Annual Hawai‘i Conservation Conference (HCC). This is the largest annual gathering of people actively involved in the protection and management of Hawai‘i’s natural environment. The purpose of your conference is to facilitate information transfer and interaction among natural resource managers and the scientific community. It is your opportunity to share experiences and ideas on a wide range of conservation issues within the 2007 theme of Conservation Strategies: Matching Science and Management. Mahalo nui loa for your continued participation and support of the activities of the HCA. This year is a landmark year for the Hawai‘i Conservation Alliance. It is the 15th anniversary of our conference and by far our largest one to date. As of July 1, twenty percent more registrations were received than at that date in 2006. There is a similar increase in presentations to be run in three and four concurrent sessions. This year the conference theme is Matching Science and Management – straight to the very core of our activities. Presenters have been asked always to have management in mind. If management is not presented, you know what the first question should be! The committee also asked for paired presentations – a paper dealing with an aspect of science followed by a paper dealing with its management. There are also eleven symposia topping last year’s high of four. -
AJR Retreating from the World.Pdf
In the face of heightened globalization and with the U.S. engaged in two wars, many mainstream news organizations have turned their backs on foreign news. Newspapers and television networks alike provide much less of it. Many outlets have shut- tered overseas bureaus. But a handful of promis- ing startups offer some hope for the future. Retreating from theWorld By Jodi Enda tori soper Former foreign correspondent Colin McMahon oversees the international news report for the Chicago Tribune and six other Tribune Co. newspapers. This arTiCle was Funded by a granT FroM The open soCieTy insTiTuTe. uring more than two decades at the Chicago to describe a modern, industrialized, assembly line approach to DTribune, Colin McMahon reported from bureaus in Mexico foreign (and sometimes national) news. And while the chain’s City, Moscow, Baghdad and Buenos Aires. He served as foreign particular method of providing identical pages for a variety of editor, directing a cadre of correspondents as they covered the papers might not be the national norm, its pared-down vision invasion of Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, the Palestinian upris- of foreign reporting is. ing. He was dispatched to Jerusalem for six months. It was Eighteen newspapers and two chains have shuttered every a heady life of globe-trotting that not only allowed him to be one of their overseas bureaus in the dozen years since AJR a witness to history, but to bring stories from the far corners first surveyed foreign coverage for the Project on the State of of the globe home to readers in America’s third-largest city, the American Newspaper (see “Goodbye, World,” November readers who live in Chicago’s distinctively ethnic neighbor- 1998).