“1 in 5 journalists killed in 2011 worked for Internet media outlets”
Article about a report by the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Article about a report by the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Article with audio companion.
Conference held each November on media, religion and culture.
Candidates from any country may submit proposals for fellowship projects that create lasting change to improve the quality and freedom of news around the world. Candidates may submit ideas for projects they would like to manage as Knight Fellows, along with the fellowship application, or for projects that recruited Knight fellows would manage.
Offers $5,000 to $25,000 stipends for American journalists to report stories outside the U.S. that demonstrate religion crossing borders and establishing boundaries across the globe. Journalists early in their careers should submit proposals for under $10,000.
The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting is an innovative award-winning non-profit journalism organization dedicated to supporting the independent international journalism that U.S. media organizations are increasingly less able to undertake. The Center focuses on under-reported topics, promoting high-quality international reporting and creating platforms that reach broad and diverse audiences.
Media professionals from outside the U.S. may apply for $7500 travel grants to report from their home countries on issues under-reported in U.S. media.
Students at schools participating in the Pulitzer Center’s Campus Consortium program may apply for up to $2,000 for international reporting fellowships. Pulitzer Center staff work with recipients on an international reporting project. Emphasis on critical issues that would not normally receive attention from U.S. media.