Our spring membership campaign kicked off this week, and we’re inviting you to take part. Every day, Report for the World corps members are producing public-service journalism that fosters understanding, connection, and growth. But we can’t do it without you. An anonymous donor is matching all gifts to Report for the World through midnight Friday.
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Misinformation and environmental reporting in Ukraine: Q&A with Dymtro Simonov
Our spring membership campaign kicked off today, and we’re inviting you to take part. Every day, Report for the World corps members are producing public-service journalism that fosters understanding, connection, and growth. But we can’t do it without you. An anonymous donor is matching all gifts to Report for the World through midnight Friday. Will
Press freedom in Nigeria a Q&A with Daniel Ojukwu
Our spring fundraising campaign is live, and we’re inviting you to take part. Every day, Report for the World corps members are producing public-service journalism that fosters understanding, connection, and growth. But we can’t do it without you. An anonymous donor is matching all gifts to Report for the World through midnight Friday. Will you
A year in review
This was a busy year for Report for the World. In 2022, we expanded to new countries, met new corps members and brought good journalism to communities across the globe. To celebrate, we’re revisiting five of our favorite moments. Welcoming our first Global Director Preethi Nallu joined Report for the World this July as our
Report for the World holds its first ever corps member gathering, with a focus on environmental journalism
Report for the World reached a new milestone, as we held our first ever in-person gathering in São Paulo, Brazil last week, bringing together our Latin American corps members and newsroom partners for a two-day investigative journalism workshop. The training sessions were supported by journalismfund.eu Participating corps members and editors from Brazil, Mexico and Peru
Q&A: The risks and challenges of covering the Amazon
The murders of the British journalist Dom Phillips and Brazilian Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira during a reporting trip in the Brazilian Amazon have once again exposed the risks for those investigating environmental issues and Indigenous communities. Phillips and Pereira were murdered last month in the Javari Valley, close to Brazil’s border with Peru and Colombia,
Q&A: Corps Member Vivian Chime
Vivian Chime is a journalist covering climate change for TheCable through Report for the World. The interview has been edited for length and clarity. When you began considering career options, what did you find compelling about a career in journalism? At first my journalism journey started out as a childhood flare for liking people I
If not journalists, then who will save democracy?
“First they came for the journalists… We don’t know what happened after that.” This riff on the famous confession by Lutheran pastor Martin Niemöller about the silence of German elites about Nazi aggression was popularized by Rappler co-founder and Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa in a FRONTLINE documentary titled “A Thousand Cuts” last year.
IWD22: A conversation with Chiamaka Okafor
This International Women’s Day, we spoke with Chiamaka Okafor, who covers Nigerian diaspora communities around the world for the Premium Times in Nigeria. Okafor has also been writing about women’s issues and international affairs. “To all the women in the world who are putting in the efforts who want to be seen: We see you.
Q&A: Corps Member Johanna Deeksha
Johanna Deeksha is a journalist covering health and education for Scroll.in through Report for the World. The interview has been edited for length and clarity. When you began considering career options, what did you find compelling about a career in journalism? I was around 12 or 13 when I decided I wanted to become a