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        <title>IWMF - International Women's Media Foundation</title> 
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    <title>Kate Adie, United Kingdom</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1315/kate-adie-united-kingdom.aspx</link> 
    <description>Relentless sniper fire and random bombing marked Kate Adie&amp;rsquo;s worst days covering the news from war zones around the globe.&amp;nbsp; Five rounds rocked her land rover, literally lifting her to the roof, as metal sliced into her thigh.
&amp;ldquo;We were under relentless pressure and operating without any sleep,&amp;rdquo; recalled Adie, recounting nearly five years of reporting for BBC during the Bosnia war. &amp;ldquo;Twenty yards in front of us a huge British military vehicle went over a land mine that blew up -- that could have been us. We were under constant sniper fire and random shelling. &amp;rdquo;
Adie &amp;ndash; the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s Lifetime Achievement Award winner &amp;ndash; has been a pioneer for women reporting from the frontlines for BBC the last 40 years. As BBC&amp;rsquo;s first female chief news correspondent, Adie has rushed to cover so many wars around the world that one cartoonist once drew a soldier&amp;rsquo;s ode to her: &amp;ldquo;We can&amp;rsquo;t start yet&amp;hellip;Kate Adie isn&amp;rsquo;t here.&amp;rdquo; 
&amp;ldquo;Kate appeared at so many turbulent datelines that it led to the saying, &amp;lsquo;Never mind the sheriff, when Katie Adie hits town it&amp;rsquo;s time to get out of Dodge City,&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo; said Stephen Claypole, former CEO of Associated Press Television News.

During the first Gulf War, Adie slept overnight in a freshly dug grave after flying into a bombed-out region in Kuwait. She tracked down Mujahedin fighters in Afghanistan, who cleared away ammunition boxes for a lengthy lunch during the war with Russia in 1989. &amp;nbsp;As Bangladesh flooded in 1988, Adie and her crew filmed and bailed as they floated along to cover the disaster. Adie traced the plight of forsaken refugees in Rwanda fleeing to the border of Zaire after tribal massacres. And she was in Sierra Leone reporting the action during the British military intervention in 2000.
&amp;ldquo;Television has changed with the advent of 24-hour news. The kind of eyewitness reporting that we were trained in has all but disappeared. It has been shunted aside by standup reports with live cameras for the 24-hour system that dominates. That means a reporter can&amp;rsquo;t be were the action is. Satellite dishes don&amp;rsquo;t stand on battlefields and in the middle of riots and demonstrations. In many cases reporters are now in the role of presenters of information,&amp;rdquo; Adie, 64, said. &amp;ldquo;In some instances during the second Gulf War people were reporting from Baghdad reading what was on their laptops. You could do that standing on a beach in Hawaii, as far as I&amp;rsquo;m concerned.&amp;rdquo;
Adie was a pathfinder in the heyday of foreign news coverage, when BBC sent her parachuting into the action for breaking news stories. &amp;nbsp;She emerged with a wry sense of humor, declaring, &amp;ldquo;Sleeping in a grave in Kuwait was very comfy &amp;ndash; tanks don&amp;rsquo;t always see you, and it&amp;rsquo;s one of the safer places.&amp;rdquo; Although tough and hard working, Adie often describes herself as &amp;ldquo;a gnat alighting on the faces of history.&amp;rdquo;
Her deadpan British wit remains intact recounting how she survived five rounds of mortars inside a land rover in Bosnia, except for a chunk of metal in her foot. &amp;ldquo;You want your toes, yes?&amp;rdquo; she recalls the surgeon later saying. &amp;ldquo;So you keep ze bullet in there.&amp;rdquo; She suffered a gunshot wound in her elbow during the Tiananmen Square protests and an injured collarbone after an irate Libyan shot her. 
Adie&amp;rsquo;s &quot;defining moment&amp;rdquo; as a journalist was in April 1980, when she covered the dramatic ending of a six-day siege of the Iranian embassy in London when special forces stormed the building and released terrified hostages. The BBC interrupted sports coverage, and Adie reported live and unscripted while crouching behind a car door. 
But starting out decades ago, Adie encountered &amp;ldquo;attitudes that were from the age of dinosaurs,&amp;rdquo; she said. &amp;ldquo;At my first BBC meeting they asked me to take the minutes. I said, &amp;lsquo;Why? I don&amp;rsquo;t do shorthand.&amp;rsquo; And they looked at me horrified. You had old-fashioned camera crews who could be aggressive about women and their place in reporting. I&amp;rsquo;d get to the interview and the camera crew would think I was a secretary and ask, &amp;lsquo;Where&amp;rsquo;s the reporter?&amp;rsquo;&amp;nbsp; I stressed that I intended to do the job and wouldn&amp;rsquo;t put up with such nonsense.&amp;rdquo;
By the early 90s when she was covering Bosnia, Adie sensed a &amp;ldquo;big change&amp;rdquo; in the media landscape with more women than men reporting on the frontlines. &amp;ldquo;More women were making it into the newsroom, but at the same time some felt constrained to volunteer to go to war. Quite a few said they wouldn&amp;rsquo;t be there covering the war if it weren&amp;rsquo;t for the pressure. But I wanted to go,&amp;rdquo; she said.
&amp;ldquo;Today everything&amp;rsquo;s changed. My advice to women who want to get into journalism is to work for anybody. Get the time in, learn what you are doing and feel strongly about this. Don&amp;rsquo;t come into it for the fame and fortune. Do something where you find you wake up in the morning and say,&amp;rsquo; Look what I&amp;rsquo;m going to do.&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo;
Adie, now a presenter on BBC Radio 4&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;From Our Own Correspondent,&amp;rdquo; has become &amp;ldquo;a role model for female journalists the world over,&amp;rdquo; said Reuters News Global Editor Chris Cramer, formerly of BBC. Cramer said that after years of reporting with &amp;ldquo;passion and sensitivity,&amp;rdquo; Adie pulled back from covering war zones in 2003 and turned to documentary work for BBC.

She went on to write &amp;ldquo;Corsets to Camouflage,&amp;rdquo; a history of women in wartime, and &amp;ldquo;Nobody&amp;rsquo;s Child,&amp;rdquo; a book describing her adoption as &amp;ldquo;my first appearance in court as a babe in arms.&amp;rdquo; Adie has won three Royal Television Society News Awards, the Broadcasting Press Guild&amp;rsquo;s Award for Outstanding Contribution to Broadcasting, the Bafta Richard Dimbleby Award and an Order of the British Empire. She is honorary professor of journalism at the University of Sunderland and has an honorary fellowship at the Royal Holloway at the University of London.

Adie is &amp;ldquo;thrilled&amp;rdquo; to receive the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s 2011&amp;nbsp; Lifetime Achievement Award. &amp;nbsp;&amp;ldquo;I&amp;rsquo;m terribly grateful. As someone who started out in journalism because I saw it as something fascinating and exciting, I didn&amp;rsquo;t expect awards for it. I can&amp;rsquo;t believe people actually pay you to do the work.&amp;rdquo;

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    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Sep 2013 23:29:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Chiranuch Premchaiporn, Thailand </title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1314/chiranuch-premchaiporn-thailand.aspx</link> 
    <description>Facing the threat of a 70-year prison sentence for critical remarks about the Thai monarchy posted on her website, Chiranuch Premchaiporn&amp;rsquo;s case has turned an international spotlight on Thailand&amp;rsquo;s draconian computer crime and press freedom laws.
&amp;ldquo;They try to silence and control the people,&amp;rdquo; says Premchaiporn, 43, webmaster and director of Thailand&amp;rsquo;s Prachatai online newspaper.  Thousands of comments stream into her website daily, but government critics insist she should have immediately deleted 10 remarks posted by Prachatai readers that criticized the Thai monarchy &amp;ndash; a criminal offense.
Premchaiporn &amp;ndash; one of IWMF&amp;rsquo;s 2011 Courage in Journalism Award winners -- is free on bail and her trial, which began in February 2011, will resume in September. Prachatai suspended its online forums in July 2010. She is suing the Thai government for its illegitimate attempts to block Prachatai and has switched to server and web hosting services outside the country.
As the Thai government moved to silence the opposition, Premchaiporn&amp;rsquo;s website became a target for censorship in March 2009.  Police raided her office, interrogating her for five hours and seizing her computer equipment.
&amp;ldquo;It was total chaos. After they searched the office they showed me an arrest warrant. They treated me like I was a criminal. I called my lawyer, and friends started coming to my office to support me and tweet about the arrest. There must have been 50 friends and journalists crowding the office,&amp;rdquo; she said.
&amp;ldquo;Everyone followed me to the police department&amp;rsquo;s crown suppression division. They questioned me for five hours. I was a little bit afraid when they took my fingerprints like I was a criminal,&amp;rdquo; said Premchaiporn, who was released on bail. &amp;rdquo;I didn&amp;rsquo;t think I&amp;rsquo;d done anything wrong, but they were trying to silence the Internet platform and I am a target.&amp;rdquo;
A year after the bloody military crackdown of a Red Shirt protest that ended in 92 deaths, the latest efforts to restrict Internet freedom have incensed critics of the government who have increasingly used social media to voice their anger. 
Despite increasing government scrutiny, Premchaiporn -- who goes by the nickname &amp;ldquo;Jiew&quot; -- remains determined to speak out about Internet freedom. Traveling back to Bangkok from an international conference in September 2010, she was pulled aside by Thai immigration officers and arrested.  &amp;ldquo;I couldn&amp;rsquo;t believe it. I kept asking, &amp;lsquo;What&amp;rsquo;s the charge?&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo; she said. &amp;ldquo;It was the same thing all over again. I found out people had been posting &amp;lsquo;unlawful&amp;rsquo; comments on the website.&amp;rdquo; Immigration police drove her five hours away to a remote police station in Khon Kaen, where she was questioned for hours and finally released.
As her case moves through Thailand&amp;rsquo;s court system, Premchaiporn continues managing her website&amp;rsquo;s 15-person staff. The popular Prachatai website, founded in 2004, has attracted worldwide support from Internet freedom organizations angered at Thailand&amp;rsquo;s restrictive, vague computer crimes act.&amp;ldquo;The media in Thailand is afraid to cover issues relating to the royal family,&amp;rdquo; Premchaiporn said. &amp;ldquo;Once it was announced that I received the Courage in Journalism Award, they covered my case and interviewed me. But there is fear.&amp;rdquo;
Although the Thai government has tightly controlled the press for the past 70 years, the latest efforts to crack down on the Internet have raised an international outcry. &amp;ldquo;In Thailand&amp;rsquo;s now highly charged political environment, Prachatai has been singled out for government harassment,&amp;rdquo; said Shawn Crispin, the Committee to Protect Journalists&amp;rsquo; senior southeast Asia representative. &amp;ldquo;In recent years, authorities have shuttered tens of thousands of websites and pages, including Prachatai, for broadly defined reasons of national security. In 2007, Thailand implemented some of the most draconian legislation in the world aimed at curbing Internet freedoms.&amp;rdquo;
After the arrests, Premchaiporn has distanced herself from her parents and eight siblings to protect them. &amp;ldquo;My family isn&amp;rsquo;t involved in any political activities,&amp;rdquo; she said. &amp;ldquo;One of my sisters wanted me to resign, but I didn&amp;rsquo;t do anything wrong. I love my job as a journalist. It&amp;rsquo;s important to inform people.&amp;rdquo;
In Thailand only about 27 percent of the people have Internet access, but officials fear &amp;ldquo;the power of the new media. When people are upset with the government, they turn to other sources of information. It&amp;rsquo;s hard for the government to control,&amp;rdquo; Premchaiporn said.
&amp;ldquo;The government singled me out to make an example,&amp;rdquo; said Prempchaiporn, who says her phone is being tapped. &amp;ldquo;They should know that there are other ways around this &amp;ndash; we will continue writing.&amp;rdquo;</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Sep 2013 23:25:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Parisa Hafezi, Iran</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1313/parisa-hafezi-iran.aspx</link> 
    <description>Riot police armed with electric batons attacked Parisa Hafezi as she struggled to cover the bloodshed and chaos on the streets of Tehran. Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters marched, many shouting, &amp;ldquo;We fight; we die.&amp;rdquo; 
After extensively covering the violent protests and government response for Reuters news agency, Hafezi was targeted by Iran&amp;rsquo;s Revolutionary Guard, which threatened to arrest her. As bureau chief for Reuters in Iran, Hafezi refused to recant her reporting on the public uprising &amp;ndash; while many local and foreign journalists fled the country after the disputed 2009 elections.
&amp;ldquo;Some reporters refused to use the Tehran dateline, but we weren&amp;rsquo;t afraid to show we were there. We didn&amp;rsquo;t move out; we were the first on the streets,&amp;rdquo; said Hafezi, 41, an Iranian-born veteran journalist. &amp;ldquo;We had to be strong and take the risks to report the stories.&amp;rdquo; 
Hafezi, one of the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s 2011 Courage in Journalism Award winners has endured beatings, interrogations and raids on her office and home because of her work. Hafezi has battled against tough restrictions on women and the media and fought efforts to censor reporting.
Undercover agents raided Reuters&amp;rsquo; Tehran office after the massive June 2009 protests, screaming at Hafezi and her staff. They bolted the doors, seized video equipment and ransacked the office. 
&amp;ldquo;While the head of the Revolutionary Guard team sat next to her and demanded (that) she show him our computer system, Parisa surreptitiously managed to send a computer message to a colleague in London to alert Reuters of the raid,&amp;rdquo; said Caroline Drees, Middle East managing editor of Reuters. &amp;ldquo;She hoped &amp;ndash; and was right &amp;ndash; that the Revolutionary Guard official would mistake the message for her login details.&amp;rdquo; 
When she reported that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad favored a U.N.-drafted nuclear fuel deal in November 2009, she was summoned to the president&amp;rsquo;s office, where officials demanded to know her source. She refused, telling them that if they wanted to deny the report she would publish the denial. They rejected her offer and threatened to revoke her press credentials.
Months later Hafezi was abducted by four men as she left her office and taken to an unmarked building in Tehran. &amp;ldquo;Are you a spy?&amp;rdquo; they shouted, slapping her and pushing her for hours. At a time when anti-government protests were reigniting in February 2010, Iran security officials wanted to silence the media. 
&amp;ldquo;Nobody knew where I was. They interrogated me and kept asking if I was having an illicit sexual relationship with former officials. I felt humiliated because I didn&amp;rsquo;t even know who they were talking about. I thought, &amp;lsquo;my god, I&amp;rsquo;m just doing my job and I&amp;rsquo;m being punished. As a single mother, everything is endangered,&amp;rsquo; &amp;rdquo; she said. &amp;ldquo;I don&amp;rsquo;t consider myself an activist &amp;ndash; I&amp;rsquo;m a journalist trying to be impartial. 
&amp;ldquo;I keep thinking that maybe as an Iranian woman I can take this opportunity to help other women, help the people be heard,&amp;rdquo; Hafezi said. That calms me down. I will do my job. I will do the interviews and tell the truth.&amp;rdquo;
As violent protests abated in 2010, authorities attempted to intimidate Hafezi by revoking her press accreditation for 45 days and interrogating her when she traveled. Today the Reuters offices are under constant surveillance and have experienced several break-ins, and staffers say that e-mails and telephone lines are bugged. The government routinely calls Reuters &amp;ldquo;the Zionist news agency.&amp;rdquo; 
Two security agents invaded Reuters&amp;rsquo; Tehran office last March, demanding to know what reporters were writing and how they get their information. They searched the office and left, after warning Hafezi not to talk about the incident. 
&amp;ldquo;I kept thinking I&amp;rsquo;d get arrested, but as you see I am still working here. I&amp;rsquo;m not censoring anything. I&amp;rsquo;m trying to be impartial and do my job reporting the facts, &amp;ldquo;she said. &amp;ldquo;Officials are worried they&amp;rsquo;ll get in trouble talking to us now, but we don&amp;rsquo;t stop.&amp;rdquo; 
After learning she was being awarded IWMF&amp;rsquo;s 2011 Courage in Journalism Award, Hafezi was overwhelmed by the reaction in Iran. &amp;ldquo;Someone from the culture ministry&amp;rsquo;s office said, &amp;lsquo;Are you as brave as they say on the IWMF website?&amp;rsquo; My reply was, &amp;lsquo;Yes, I am brave enough to stay here and continue to do my work.&amp;rsquo; This will encourage other women colleagues in the Middle East who are facing the same problems.  I haven&amp;rsquo;t done anything wrong. More and more I&amp;rsquo;m getting congratulations from Iranian colleagues who were scared to say anything. Before I even had friends say, &amp;lsquo;Leave the country,&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo; she said.
Working in a male-dominated culture with tight restrictions on women, Hafezi has turned the tables. &amp;ldquo;As a woman here, men are reluctant to reject you when you ask a question. They see I&amp;rsquo;m strong. I&amp;rsquo;m not scared.&amp;rdquo; She joined Reuters in 1999 as &amp;ldquo;a part-time nobody&amp;rdquo; with a master&amp;rsquo;s degree in metallurgical engineering and started covering stories within two years. One month before the controversial 2009 election, she was named Reuters&amp;rsquo; Tehran bureau chief &amp;ndash; the first woman to hold the post.</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Sep 2013 23:19:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Adela Navarro Bello, Mexico</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1312/adela-navarro-bello-mexico.aspx</link> 
    <description>Drug cartels have murdered her editors and repeatedly threatened to kill Adela Navarro Bello, but she refuses to stop writing about Mexico&amp;rsquo;s raging violence.
As general director of Zeta newsmagazine in Tijuana, Navarro Bello, 43, &amp;ndash; one of the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s 2011 Courage in Journalism Award winners -- is facing daunting challenges overseeing the publication&amp;rsquo;s struggle to cover escalating violence in the crime-ridden border city.
Mexican drug lord Joaqu&amp;iacute;n &amp;ldquo;El Chapo&amp;rdquo; Guzman appears to be &amp;ldquo;targeting&amp;rdquo; Tijuana after the extradition of cartel boss Benjamin Arellano F&amp;eacute;lix to the U.S., Navarro Bello said.  &amp;ldquo;Nobody was fighting for this territory before because the cartel got protection from the government and police. Now it looks like Guzman is arriving and that will start a new war in our city,&amp;rdquo; she said.
At the same time, Navarro Bello is calling for the Mexican government to reopen the case of Zeta editor Hector &amp;ldquo;El Gato&amp;rdquo; F&amp;eacute;lix Miranda, who was killed in 1988 by the bodyguards of ex-Tijuana mayor Jorge Hank Rhon. Navarro Bello was outraged when Hank Rhon was arrested and released because of lack of evidence on illegal weapons allegations. 
&amp;ldquo;Hank is not absolved,&amp;rdquo; Zeta headlined after he was released. After this incident, the paper reported the makes and models of 88 weapons seized, including many of the serial numbers. &amp;ldquo;Our website collapsed from the traffic,&amp;rdquo; Navarro said. &amp;ldquo;The judge let Hank go because there was no search warrant.&amp;rdquo;
&amp;ldquo;Our newspapers sold out, and we were getting 100 hits a second on the website,&amp;rdquo; said Navarro Bello. &amp;rdquo;We devoted 18 pages to an investigation of the ex-mayor. Everything is there. He is a suspect in everything from money laundering, drug cartels and murders. In 23 years as mayor nobody has investigated him,&amp;rdquo; she said.
While the cartels have silenced many Mexican journalists, Navarro Bello refuses to stop covering the drug wars despite repeated death threats. &amp;ldquo;I don&amp;rsquo;t understand self-censorship in Mexico. I don&amp;rsquo;t understand why reporters are afraid. If you&amp;rsquo;re not reporting on what is happening you are an accomplice to these people,&amp;rdquo; said Navarro Bello. &amp;ldquo;We have the right to freedom of speech in a democratic country like Mexico.&amp;rdquo;
The Arellano-F&amp;eacute;lix cartel threatened to kill Navarro in January 2010, and seven soldiers were assigned to guard her around the clock. Police arrested 10 people the following February, as they were plotting to plant grenades to blow up the Zeta offices. In retaliation for covering the drug war, Zeta co-founder Hector F&amp;eacute;lix Miranda was murdered in 1988, and co-editor Francisco Ortiz Franco was killed in 2004.
&amp;ldquo;We kept wondering, &amp;lsquo;How many lives must be lost?&amp;rsquo; Francisco was putting his two children in the back seat of the car before he was gunned down. The kids got out of the car and started crying and running.  It was one of the saddest moments in the history of Zeta,&amp;rdquo; said Navarro Bello. &amp;ldquo;There was talk of closing the paper, but we wanted to do our work.&amp;rdquo;
After learning that she received this year&amp;rsquo;s Courage in Journalism Award, Navarro Bello said she felt that &amp;ldquo;Zeta isn&amp;rsquo;t alone. We have allies. This is an important message to the people of Mexico.&amp;rdquo;
&amp;ldquo;Despite the dangers, Navarro Bello has continued to show fierce commitment to reporting the facts and advancing the cause of press freedom in a hostile climate of violence, intimidation and self-censorship,&amp;rdquo; said Carlos Laur&amp;iacute;a, senior Americas program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists.
&amp;ldquo;I&amp;rsquo;ve been poisoned with the truth. I can&amp;rsquo;t stop, &amp;ldquo;Navarro Bello said.  &amp;ldquo;We aren&amp;rsquo;t afraid to write about the drug cartels and run the names of people who are hurting our society. We tell the police who they are. That&amp;rsquo;s the kind of journalism we do. We go everywhere and cover everything. We won&amp;rsquo;t remain silent.&amp;rdquo;</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Sep 2013 23:14:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Mary Lundy Semela</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1311/mary-lundy-semela.aspx</link> 
    <description>Mary Lundy Semela is IWMF&amp;rsquo;s Director of Development, responsible for raising operating and programmatic support. A nonprofit professional for many years, Mary has raised significant funding for organizations across the country in the areas of education, social services, and advocacy. Most recently she worked with the YWCA USA office in Washington, DC.

Prior to Nelson Mandela&amp;rsquo;s historic rise to power in South Africa, Mary was active in the anti-apartheid movement, helping to convince U.S. based entities to divest their South African holdings. She also played an active role in the anti-racism movement in the U.S., working with individuals and groups to identify ways to actively &amp;ldquo;undo&amp;rdquo; racism. Mary has an undergraduate degree in English from Loyola University in New Orleans.</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Mon, 11 Feb 2013 20:17:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Sharon Waxman</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1310/sharon-waxman.aspx</link> 
    <description>Author, entrepreneur and award-winning journalist Sharon Waxman is Chief Executive Officer and Editor-in-Chief of TheWrap.com, an independent voice covering the business of entertainment and media.

Founded in 2009, TheWrap is the fastest-growing news organization covering the business of entertainment. Launching new products and platforms every year, The Wrap News Inc. is comprised of TheWrap.com, the award-winning, industry-leading outlet for high-profile newsbreaks, investigative stories and authoritative analysis; ItsontheGrid.com, the most current, relevant film development database; ThePowerGrid, an algorithmic, data-driven ranking system for every person, project and company in the film business; and TheGrill, an executive leadership conference centered on the convergence of entertainment, media and technology.

Waxman is a leading authority on the entertainment business and media and a frequent television commentator on matters relating to media and entertainment. Waxman was previously the Hollywood correspondent for The New York Times until January 2008. Before joining the Times, she was a correspondent for the Washington Post based in Los Angeles, from 1995 until 2003. She was a foreign correspondent for 10 years, covering the Middle East and European politics, principally for The Washington Post. Waxman has won many awards for her work, including the award for best online columnist in the National Entertainment Journalism awards in 2012. She was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize by The Washington Post in 1999 for her work covering the second Palestinian intifada, the year before she won the prestigious feature writing award for Arts &amp;amp; Entertainment writing from the University of Missouri.

While at the Post, she returned to the Middle East on several occasions to write a series about Islamic culture, to cover the war in Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Waxman is also the author of two books, including the best-seller, &quot;Rebels on the Backlot: Six Maverick Directors and How They Conquered the Hollywood Studio System.&quot; Her most recent book, &quot;Loot: The Battle Over the Stolen Treasures of the Ancient World,&quot; examined who ought to own the trophies of history, Western museums, or the countries that were plundered over 200 years.

Waxman attended Barnard College, Columbia University, where she studied English literature, then earned a Masters of Philosophy degree in Modern Middle East Studies from St. Antony's College at Oxford University.
She lives in southern California with her family.</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Fri, 25 Jan 2013 23:35:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Alexandra C. Trower</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1309/alexandra-c-trower.aspx</link> 
    <description>Alexandra C. Trower is the Executive Vice President, Global Communications, of The Est&amp;eacute;e Lauder Companies Inc.
Trower directs the Company&amp;rsquo;s overall global communications strategy, overseeing Global Brand Communications, Corporate Communications, Philanthropic Communications and communications on behalf of the Lauder family since April 2008. In addition, Trower and her team are responsible for the Company&amp;rsquo;s global Breast Cancer Awareness campaign and its Corporate Responsibility communications.
 Trower has more than 20 years of experience in global communications, with a broad background in financial, corporate and consumer relations. Before joining The Est&amp;eacute;e Lauder Companies, Trower was Senior Vice President, Media Relations for Bank of America, where she worked to enhance the Bank&amp;rsquo;s brand, image and reputation in the U.S. and abroad through integrated media, communications and marketing efforts. 
Prior to that, Trower was a Managing Director at JPMorgan Chase, where she was responsible for Corporate Communications at JPMorgan Fleming Asset Management. She also spent 10 years at Chancellor LGT Asset Management, now part of Invesco, where she was Vice President of Corporate Communications.
 Trower graduated from Hollins University in Roanoke, VA. She lives in New York City with her husband; their daughter attends college in Connecticut.</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 22 Jan 2013 23:32:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <comments>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1308/ann-marie-valentine.aspx#Comments</comments> 
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    <title>Ann Marie Valentine</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1308/ann-marie-valentine.aspx</link> 
    <description>Ann Marie Valentine is the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s program assistant, responsible for providing coordination and administrative support for the organization&amp;rsquo;s portfolio of programs. Prior to joining the IWMF, Valentine worked in external affairs for a non-profit agency in New Jersey. She holds a bachelor&amp;rsquo;s degree in Political Science and Religious Studies from Gettysburg College. 
While a student, she worked as a Peer Learning Assistant for the Department of Religious Studies, and coordinated an international expedition on behalf of The Office of Experiential Education. In the fall of 2010, Valentine lived and studied in Morocco where she completed her own field research. She speaks Arabic and Spanish. </description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 29 Aug 2012 22:05:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Anna Schiller</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1307/anna-schiller.aspx</link> 
    <description>Anna Schiller is the IWMF's Communications Strategist, responsible for all aspects of the IWMF's external communication. Prior to joining the IWMF, Schiller was a Senior Press and Public Diplomacy Officer at the German Embassy in Washington, DC. She was trained in this field at the Delegation of the European Union, also in Washington, DC.
As a teenager and later as a college student, Schiller hosted a weekly one-hour show at the local radio station in her home town Luebeck, Germany. Later she also hosted a news program at the local TV station in Oldenburg, Germany. Schiller holds a Master's Degree in Political Science from the University of Oldenburg and the University of Wyoming. She is fluent in German and Dutch.</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 01 Aug 2012 21:07:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Q&amp;A with Shirley Carswell</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1305/qa-with-shirley-carswell.aspx</link> 
    <description>Shirley Carswell, deputy managing editor at the Washington Post, now heads the newspaper's recruiting, hiring, diversity and training efforts. She joined the Post in 1988.

Following her promotion, Carswell discussed with the IWMF how women journalists can stand out in the hiring process and the need to maintain diversity in newsrooms.

Q: Tell me what your new role as head of recruiting, hiring, diversity and training efforts will entail.

A: My new role is focused on broadening The Post's talent acquisition efforts to ensure we are hiring the best journalists around the country and on enhancing the skills of our existing staff. And in both hiring and promotion, I'll be focused on increasing diversity, which will result in better coverage.

Q: What qualities and skills do you and your team look for in new hires?

A: Above all, we look for people who are curious about the world around them and who are passionate about telling stories. Of course, we also look for strong writers, analytical thinkers and those with broad digital skills. 

Q: How can women journalists in particular distinguish themselves in the hiring process?

A: Women sometimes are not as comfortable tooting their own horn, talking about their accomplishments and strengths. Those who are skilled at showcasing their work can distinguish themselves.

Q: You will also be responsible for training journalists in your new role. What are some issues you anticipate addressing, especially as newsrooms continue to change and adapt?

A: The Post recently launched a major training initiative for the entire newsroom, and that's the foundation upon which I'll be building. Issues include helping journalists discover and make better use of new digital tools that are cropping up every day and ensuring that our journalistic standards are upheld across all platforms. &amp;nbsp;

Q: According to the Maynard Institute post about your new job, buyouts are disproportionately claiming journalists of color. How can newsrooms ensure that valuable voices aren't lost in the shuffle? Can your new position help with this?

A: One of the areas I will be focused on is staff retention. When people feel like they have a future in preserving and building the business, they are less likely to move on. However, one thing traditional media companies have to realize is that younger journalists don't necessarily desire to spend their entire careers at one place, like some in my generation have. We shouldn't view it as a negative whenever someone decides to move for another opportunity. But we need to have a pipeline of new journalists of color so that we don't lose those voices or lose ground on diversity in newsrooms.</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 26 Jun 2012 18:40:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Q&amp;A with Teresa Rehman</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1304/qa-with-teresa-rehman.aspx</link> 
    <description>Indian journalist Teresa Rehman says she is &quot;living a dream&quot; by working on her new entrepreneurial venture. Rehman started The Thumb Print, an international news magazine based in Northeast India.

The online magazine helps shed light on the often under-reported stories from the region, Rehman says.

&quot;Unveiling the mystifying facets of this trouble-scarred region has always been cathartic -- a realization that underneath the turmoil lies a hope for peace,&quot; she said.

Rehman, who participated in 2008 and 2009 IWMF initiatives on women and HIV/AIDS policymaking, shares her thoughts on The Thumb Print and offers advice for other women interested in starting journalism ventures in a Q&amp;amp;A with the IWMF.

&quot;One cannot sustain any entrepreneurial venture without passion and dedication,&quot; she said.

Read The Thumb Print: www.thethumbprintmag.com.

Q: How did you decide to start The Thumb Print? Is the magazine online only, or does it have a print component?

A: In The Thumb Print, I am actually living a dream &amp;ndash; a dream to be visible and audible to the world. I need to be heard and seen as I hail from an under-reported part of India -- the Northeastern region, which comprises of eight heterogeneous states of the Indian union. ... The region has witnessed decades of violent insurgency and has always remained in the periphery of the Indian consciousness. The region with a predominantly tribal population has often been ghettoised as a monolith and has grossly been misrepresented by the so-called &amp;lsquo;mainstream&amp;rsquo; media. We are in news for the wrong reasons &amp;ndash; for violence, bloodshed. The region has often been projected as underdeveloped and unsafe.
&amp;nbsp;
I have personally reported from this region for many &amp;lsquo;national&amp;rsquo; media houses in India and have always struggled to find space. I have been told many times that the &amp;lsquo;region&amp;rsquo; does not sell. The region has always been far removed from the corporate radar and does not interest the advertisers. I have been pained by the lipservice paid to the region. 

I decided to create my own space and take the region -- which is full of untold stories of men, women and children -- to the world and bring the world closer. We wish to be international, savvy in our outlook towards the rest of India, South Asia, and the world.

This is an online magazine at the moment. In the times to come, hopefully, we will be able to garner enough resources to be able to come up with a print version as well.&amp;nbsp; 

Q: What kind of topics does The Thumb Print cover?

A: We want to chronicle the lives of the common people of the region and tell living and vibrant tales. We also want to bring home fascinating stories of people from different parts of the world. We want the world to have a refreshing look at the region. This is a dream to go global with local stories -- tales of the marginalized, the under-reported, criss-crossing through geographical terrain and psychological barriers. Our soul lies in Northeast India. We hope to live and delve in the contemporary times and tell stories with a difference. We want to act as a bridge between the region and the world. 

I have long years of experience of reporting from the region and I always said that the region is a &amp;lsquo;paradise for journalists&amp;rsquo;. Unveiling the mystifying facets of this trouble-scarred region has always been cathartic -- a realization that underneath the turmoil lies a hope for peace.

Q: This is a new entrepreneurial venture for you. How did you secure funding, advertising and contributors for the project?

A: Believe it or not, this magazine has evolved more like a cottage industry. I am running this magazine from my laptop and my living room in a remote district located in Assam, a state of the Indian union. This is the might of the cyber world. I have invested my hard-earned savings and set up this portal. Usually people look for finances first and then go for a venture. I decided to work the other way around. I wanted the world to have a look at my work first and then generate revenue in the form of advertisements. I am thankful to my friends and family who supported me and had faith in my enterprise.&amp;nbsp; And the way digital technology and social networking sites connect the world is amazing. We have been able to create our own space in the virtual space. 

In fact, it&amp;rsquo;s a whole virtual space at work. I gather editorial content in a remote part of Assam, and it is being edited and honed by our Consulting Editor M. Radhika sitting in Delaware in the U.S. I discuss the editorial content through email or phone with another Consulting Editor, Monideepa Choudhury, who is a senior colleague and has a good understanding of the dynamics of the region. And my pillar of support has been my husband, Raza, who handles my two little angels while I am engrossed in work. I am multi-tasking from conceptualising to actually making things work.

We hope that the quality of our work will attract advertisers and we hope to generate revenue to be able to sustain this &amp;lsquo;dream&amp;rsquo;. 

Q: What do you hope to achieve with The Thumb Print in the future?

A: As I had said, I am chasing a &amp;lsquo;dream&amp;rsquo;.&amp;nbsp; It&amp;rsquo;s more like a mission for us. I am investing my savings, time, energy in this &amp;lsquo;dream&amp;rsquo;. It&amp;rsquo;s not an easy task being a mother of two little children. We are not hankering for immediate commercial benefits, but we are delving into a long-term evolutionary exercise. But I have a feeling that we will be able to sustain ourselves and evolve into an institution one day. 

Q: Do you have any advice to share with women journalists hoping to start their own news business or website?

A: I think one needs to have a clear vision and objective before venturing into any kind of enterprise. And more importantly, one cannot sustain any entrepreneurial venture without passion and dedication. It is also important to pick up nuances of the new enterprise. For instance, the technicalities of running a website is a new learning experience for me though I am not a very tech-savvy person. Now I have to pick up the nuances of online advertising, packaging and branding. It is a lot of hard work but I am enjoying every minute of it. Quality editorial content is our forte, and we hope to live up to the expectations of the market forces. 

As a woman, this venture is a fulfilling experience in the sense that I have been able to work from home and take care of my two daughters simultaneously. I am my own boss now. I have something that I can call my own. In fact, enterprising women journalists can take advantage of the immense potentialities of the cyber space and carve a niche for themselves.
</description> 
    <dc:creator>admin</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 19 Jun 2012 16:51:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Priyanka Borpujari, India</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1303/priyanka-borpujari-india.aspx</link> 
    <description>Priyanka Borpujari, the 2012-13 IWMF Elizabeth Neuffer Fellow, is an independent journalist based in Mumbai, India. She has reported on the ways in which indigenous populations in the Indian state of Chhattisgarh were being caught in a war between a government keen on displacing them to make way for mines and factories, and armed Maoists. Her reports brought focus to what she describes as &amp;ldquo;deprived, malnourished, burning India,&amp;rdquo; even as charges were levied against her in an attempt to keep her away from reporting in the region.

Read more.</description> 
    <dc:creator>nhoffman</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 13 Jun 2012 17:03:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>sahrawi-media-gallery-long</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1302/sahrawi-media-gallery-long.aspx</link> 
    <description>Your browser does not support inline frames</description> 
    <dc:creator>juan</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Fri, 27 Jan 2012 20:51:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Linda Mason</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1300/linda-mason.aspx</link> 
    <description>Linda Mason, former Senior Vice President, Standards and Special Projects at CBS News, was responsible for two of CBS News' weekend broadcasts, &quot;Sunday Morning&quot; and the &quot;CBS Evening News&quot; weekend editions, and was the CBS News representative for National Election Pool (NEP), the consortium of news organizations that conducts exit polling on election days.

As senior vice president, Mason oversaw the application of the standards and practices of CBS News and the CBS News Archives, one of the largest television and audio archives in the world. She administered the division's internship and minority recruiting programs. 

She headed the internal panel that examined the mistakes of Election Night 2000 for CBS News. The result was an 87-page report cited by media critics for its in-depth and critical look at the procedures and decisions of that night. The investigation and report led to a restructuring of the CBS News Decision Desk, which Mason headed in 2004, among many other changes in CBS News election-night procedures. 

Mason has also overseen &quot;CBS Reports,&quot; a documentary series for which she served as executive producer; &quot;The Class of 2000.&amp;rdquo; She helped develop &quot;Before Your Eyes,&quot; a series of critically acclaimed primetime specials produced by CBS News which explored national issues through a time-intensive study of a single story. She also served as the executive in charge of &quot;Eye to Eye,&quot; the CBS News magazine (1993-95), and the primetime specials, &quot;60 Minutes&amp;hellip;25 Years&quot; (1993) and &quot;60 Minutes at 30&quot; (1998).

Prior to her management assignments, Mason was executive producer of &quot;CBS News Sunday Morning&quot; (1987-92) and of CBS News' weekend broadcasts (1986-92).  Mason had been a senior producer for the &quot;CBS Evenings News&quot; (1980-86) during the anchorships of both Walter Cronkite and Dan Rather. She became the first female producer on the broadcast when she joined it as a field producer in 1971.
She was a writer/associate producer for the &quot;CBS Morning News,&quot;(1968-70). Before that, Mason was a news writer at WCBS-TV, the CBS-owned station in New York. She joined CBS News in January 1966 as a radio desk assistant.</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 18:57:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Parisa Khosravi</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1299/parisa-khosravi.aspx</link> 
    <description>Parisa Khosravi, Senior Vice President for International Newsgathering at CNN, is responsible for international and domestic newsgathering operations, which include more than 100 correspondents at the network&amp;rsquo;s 45 bureaus worldwide in addition to the Atlanta-based international and domestic assignment desks.
&amp;nbsp;
She also oversees International Newsource, the network&amp;rsquo;s international affiliate division that services more than 200 CNN affiliates worldwide. 

Khosravi has been responsible for driving the network&amp;rsquo;s largest investment in international newsgathering in its 30-year-history. In this time she has strategically increased the number of bureaus around the world, placing new operations in Kabul, Afghanistan; Lagos, Nigeria; Nairobi, Kenya; Mumbai, India; and Abu Dhabi, UAE. In nearly 24 years with CNN, Khosravi has led CNN&amp;rsquo;s coverage of the most significant international stories of the past two decades. 

Previously Khosravi served as vice president of international newsgathering, overseeing all staff deployment for CNN's international correspondents as well as the execution of planned and breaking news events for all of CNN's news services. Khosravi joined CNN as a video journalist in 1987. She earned a bachelor's degree in broadcast journalism from Columbia College in Chicago and studied French at the Universit&amp;eacute; de Sorbonne in Paris. She is fluent in Farsi.</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 18:37:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Jackee Batanda, Uganda</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1298/jackee-batanda-uganda.aspx</link> 
    <description>Jackee Budesta Batanda is a Ugandan journalist who has reported on the vicious acid attacks of women as “revenge crimes” and the targeted murders of albinos.&#160; Amid a brutal crackdown on journalists covering anti-government protests, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has denounced local and international media outlets as &quot;enemies.&quot; In this atmosphere, Batanda became determined to report and research “closing media spaces in African nations” during the fellowship.&#160; Batanda, 31, a reporter for the Global Press Institute, plans to create a reporting skills workshop for Ugandan journalists after her seven-month fellowship.&#160; </description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 28 Sep 2011 21:01:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>The Voices of Women in Newsrooms and Rural Africa Enhanced by IWMF’s Reporting Program</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1297/the-voices-of-women-in-newsrooms-and-rural-africa-enhanced-by-iwmfs-reporting-program.aspx</link> 
    <description>

A four-year, $2.5 million IWMF program has transformed the reporting of agriculture and rural development in Africa and given voice to rural women farmers.

&quot;This program has not only changed how reporting on agriculture is conducted in the six media organizations, but it has transformed the careers of trainees who now approach reporting on all the topics they cover in a different way,&quot; said Elisa Munoz, IWMF&amp;rsquo;s director of programs who has overseen the project.

IWMF staffers Alana Barton and Nadine Hoffman traveled to Kampala, Uganda in late May, 2011 for&amp;nbsp;the final meeting with participants in the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s Reporting on Women and Agriculture: Africa (RWA) program. The dominant role of women in agriculture&amp;nbsp;was overlooked until this program trained reporters to cover this area.

Since the program began, RWA participants in Mali, Uganda and Zambia have become respected leaders in their newsrooms and have set a new standard for reporting on issues of agriculture and rural development, their supervisors reported at the program&amp;rsquo;s closing session.

The final forum focused on assessing outcomes and sustainability of RWA, which was designed to increase and enhance reporting on the role of women and agriculture. The program was funded by the Howard G. Buffett Foundation.

Patrick Luganda, IWMF&amp;rsquo;s trainer in Uganda, said of his trainees, &quot;They know exactly what to do. They know they&amp;rsquo;ve got to source the stories, go out to the field, do their homework, interviews and research&amp;hellip;all the skills we taught have been put into practice.&quot;

Trainees have also begun an informal mentoring system in their newsrooms, and they are viewed by their colleagues as true experts.

&quot;My position has changed,&quot; Ellen Hambuba of the Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation (ZNBC) &amp;ndash; one of six participating media organizations explained. &quot;My editors know that because of the training I&amp;rsquo;ve acquired more skills, and I&amp;rsquo;m able to share the knowledge with colleagues and advise them. I&amp;rsquo;ve become an expert.&quot;

Zambian trainer Susan Musukuma expressed great expectations for Hambuba and her counterparts at ZNBC and the Times of Zambia. &quot;I&amp;rsquo;m very sure that in the long term&amp;hellip;these women will be in key positions in the media in Zambia.&quot;

The depth and breadth of reporting on women and agriculture, particularly in rural areas, has increased dramatically as a result of the program. &quot;Between 2009 and now, it can be seen that agriculture has assumed an important place,&quot; Malian trainer Mahamane Hameye Cisse said. 

The trainees&amp;rsquo; reporting &quot;gives an authoritative voice to women,&quot; Luganda said. &quot;Telling the story of a 34-year-old woman farmer with five children is to me a major milestone, because previously our stories were about the minister of agriculture and what he said.&quot;

Reuben Kajokoto, ZNBC&amp;rsquo;s director of programs, cited a shift in his newsroom&amp;rsquo;s editorial policy as a result of the RWA program. &quot;Most of the news in the past only had a few voices from the rural area, so a deliberate move was made to get stories from rural areas. If you set your goals, you can actually get those voices that are not normally there.&quot;

Kajokoto added that the new editorial policy is good for business. &quot;When you cover a wider spectrum of people, you are likely to get more sponsors,&quot; he explained.

Advertising revenues at participating media organizations increased due to agriculture themed weekly pullouts and programs that have attracted loyal advertisers. Times of Zambia editor Miriam Zimba said that on Mondays, the day the paper&amp;rsquo;s agriculture page runs, they sometimes run a four-page supplement to fit all the related ads.

&amp;nbsp;</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 06 Jul 2011 19:51:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>World Women Media Leaders to Examine Equality in News Operations</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1296/world-women-media-leaders-to-examine-equality-in-news-operations.aspx</link> 
    <description>Powerful women media executives overseeing some of the world’s biggest news organizations are gathering in Washington, D.C., March 22-25, 2011, to examine the status of women in the media.By the time they leave the International Conference of Women Media Leaders, nearly 80 delegates will have signed off on a plan to level the playing field in newsrooms around the globe. The International Women’s Media Foundation and George Washington University’s Global Media Institute are partnering on the conference.</description> 
    <dc:creator>jpodesta</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 02 Mar 2011 00:46:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>International Women Media Leaders Conference Spotlighting Gender Equity</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1295/international-women-media-leaders-conference-spotlighting-gender-equity.aspx</link> 
    <description>WASHINGTON, D.C.  -- Shining the spotlight on women in the news business, the International Women’s Media Foundation and The George Washington University Global Media Institute are partnering on a groundbreaking conference March 22-25, 2011, bringing together top women media executives from around the world to discuss remaining gender barriers and craft a plan for the future. The first-ever comprehensive global report on the status of women in the news media will be released, analyzing research data from 500 print and broadcast companies in 59 countries. The IWMF commissioned the two-year study – the first detailed research that closely examines the challenges facing women news professionals everywhere.</description> 
    <dc:creator>jpodesta</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 02 Mar 2011 00:37:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Iryna Khalip</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1294/iryna-khalip.aspx</link> 
    <description>Under Attack in Belarus: Iryna Khalip's Lawyers Targeted; Secret Trials Begin
February 18, 2011 -- While famed Belarus journalist Iryna Khalip remains under house arrest with 24-hour KGB guards, her former lawyers have been stripped of their licenses to practice law.

&amp;ldquo;She is in prison with two guards at home,&amp;rdquo; her sister-in-law Irina Sannikov told the IWMF. &amp;ldquo;Her 3-year-old son is with her, but they are under incredible stress. She can&amp;rsquo;t communicate with anyone or they will send her back to prison.&amp;rdquo;

Sannikov and other Belarus activists came to Washington this week, lobbying for the United States to step up sanctions against authoritarian Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko. The U.S. and the European Union have banned travel and frozen assets of Lukashenko and more than 150 of his associates after widespread arrests following his disputed December election.

&amp;ldquo;We want President Obama to speak out against the regime,&amp;rdquo; said Irina Sannikov, who has organized a website to support the imprisoned activists called FreeBelarusNow.org. &amp;ldquo;We must not forget Belarus.&amp;rdquo;

Former U.S.S.R. President Mikhail Gorbachev, actor George Clooney, playwright Tom Stoppard, former President of Czechoslovakia Vaclav Havel, actor Josh Brolin and dozens of others have formed the freebelarusnow.org website. They are also planning to expand a Facebook page to press the government of Belarus to meet international human rights standards and release prisoners.

Khalip, who is married to jailed opposition presidential candidate Andrei Sannikov, was released from prison and placed under house arrest in recent weeks.&amp;nbsp; She could face up to 15 years in prison, if she is convicted of charges of inciting a riot. Khalip, an IWMF Courage in Journalism Award winner, is a reporter and editor in the Minsk bureau of Novaya Gazeta.

Khalip&amp;rsquo;s father, Uladzimer Khalip, told RFE/RL that his daughter&amp;rsquo;s lawyers resigned suddenly when Belarus authorities warned them that they would lose their licenses if they continued to represent her.&amp;nbsp; He believes authorities want to force his daughter to accept a state-appointed lawyer who would be under government control.

Belarus faced another wave of protests this week, when opposition activist Vasuk Parfyankow was sentenced to four years in a high-security prison for taking part in a post-election protest on Dec. 19. More than 46 other people &amp;ndash; among them four of nine presidential candidates -- are charged in the so-called riot case.

The Washington Post editorialized against Lukashenko this week, urging the Obama administration to attempt to persuade E.U. governments &amp;ldquo;to adopt sanctions against the oil monopoly, Beineftekhim&amp;rdquo; and appealing to President Obama to personally and publicly condemn Lukashenko.</description> 
    <dc:creator>jpodesta</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Fri, 18 Feb 2011 17:20:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>CBS Correspondent Lara Logan Recovering From Brutal Sexual Attack in Egypt</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1293/cbs-correspondent-lara-logan-recovering-from-brutal-sexual-attack-in-egypt.aspx</link> 
    <description>

CBS correspondent Lara Logan shown here the day she&amp;nbsp;was attacked&amp;nbsp; in Egypt. &amp;nbsp;(AP / CBS News)

Daring CBS correspondent Lara Logan is hospitalized in the U.S., after suffering a &amp;ldquo;brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating&amp;rdquo; by a mob during the Egyptian revolution, the network announced.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;ldquo;On Friday, Feb. 11, the day Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak stepped down, CBS chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan was covering the jubilation in Tahrir Square for a &amp;lsquo;60 Minutes&amp;rsquo; story when she and her team and their security were surrounded by a dangerous element amidst the celebration. It was a mob of more than 200 people whipped into frenzy, &amp;ldquo;CBS reported.

&amp;ldquo;In the crush of the mob, she was separated from her crew. She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers. She reconnected with the CBS team, returned to her hotel and returned to the United States on the first flight the next morning. She is currently in the hospital recovering.

&amp;ldquo;There will be no further comment from CBS News and correspondent Logan and her family respectfully request privacy at this time, &amp;ldquo; CBS reported.

IWMF Executive Director Liza Gross said, &quot;The outrageous attack on Lara Logan points up the dangers that women journalists around the world face as they cover the stories that must be told. This brings&amp;nbsp;it home for us as Americans, but I hope we can focus&amp;nbsp;on the broader issue of sexual violence as a tool to intimidate women journalists. Laura Logan is a brave professional, and our thoughts are with her as she struggles through this difficult time.&quot;

During the past 18 years, Logan&amp;rsquo;s bold reporting from war zones has won her attention around the world.&amp;nbsp; Her five-segment series on U.S. Marines on patrol in Afghanistan for the &quot;CBS Evening News&quot; was recently named an RTDNA/Edward R. Murrow Award winner. Since February 2006, Logan has been chief foreign correspondent. That same year she became a correspondent for &quot;60 Minutes&quot; the same year.</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 16 Feb 2011 20:53:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Empowering Women: Sweeping Media Changes in Coverage of African Women</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1292/empowering-women-sweeping-media-changes-in-coverage-of-african-women.aspx</link> 
    <description>





At IWMF's Reporting on Agriculture and Women program, Christine Lanyero and Assa Sakiliba talk at a meeting in Mali. 

A four-year IWMF project to transform news coverage of long-overlooked women in agriculture and rural development in Mali, Uganda and Zambia has surpassed of the expectations of media organizations.

Twenty-one women media leaders gathered in Mali with International Women&amp;rsquo;s Media Foundation leaders in February to examine sweeping changes that have taken place since the program was created nearly four years ago.

Under a $2.5 million grant from the Howard G. Buffett Foundation, the IWMF worked with news organizations that expanded coverage of the vital role of women in agriculture and created new sections to spotlight their work. The program, which ends in June, has made a lasting impact on the way journalists cover this vital area, organizers report.

&amp;ldquo;The changes we see in the news coverage by these women journalists and media organizations surpassed our expectations,&amp;rdquo; said Elisa Munoz, IWMF&amp;rsquo;s director of programs, who traveled to Mali to meet with program leaders. &amp;ldquo;We see far more coverage of the role of women in agriculture. Media organizations now recognize the importance and value of reporting on these issues.&amp;rdquo;

&amp;ldquo;Without transparency, it is nearly impossible to solve many of the challenges that face vulnerable populations in less-developed countries. Media that are free to operate and free to report can play a significant role in addressing issues that effect food insecurity, conflict and gender equality,&amp;rdquo; said Howard G. Buffett, president of the Howard G. Buffett Foundation.

The IWMF &amp;ldquo;Reporting on Agriculture and Women: Africa&amp;rdquo; program was funded by the Howard G.&amp;nbsp; Buffett Foundation, which supports international projects focused on agriculture, nutrition and environment.&amp;nbsp; IWMF trainers for the project visited Buffett&amp;rsquo;s farm to learn about agricultural practices and listen to his vision for change in Africa.

During IWMF&amp;rsquo;s visit in Mali, journalists talked about how readers now expect extensive coverage of women in agriculture. Reporters described how they had never connected with rural women in coverage of agriculture until the program was created.

The program&amp;rsquo;s team leader, C&amp;eacute;lia D&amp;rsquo;Almeid, assistant to the editor of Radio Kl&amp;eacute;du in Mali, told the IWMF, &amp;ldquo;We used to think that these women didn&amp;rsquo;t talk, but they do. The program has really had an impact on rural life.&amp;nbsp; Rural women are communicating more and more about what they do and we are responsible for that.&amp;rdquo;

&amp;ldquo;Before I had no direct connection to rural women. I dealt with women as wives and mothers. Now I cover them as they relate to farming, cattle farming and other issues,&amp;rdquo; said Assa Sakiliba,&amp;nbsp; a newscaster at Radio Kledu.&amp;nbsp; &amp;ldquo;Because of our reporting, government authorities have become more and more interested in women&amp;rsquo;s issues.&amp;nbsp; Our ministers invite us on a visit to a farm.&amp;nbsp; The women&amp;rsquo;s farms associations also call us.&amp;nbsp; As a journalist it has made me more interested in agriculture and environmental issues.&amp;nbsp; The changes in my career are very visible.&amp;nbsp; The quality has changed.&amp;nbsp; I have a weekly article on Thursdays as a result of this program.&amp;rdquo; Margaret Mangani, the Times of Zambia features editor, described how her newspaper had expanded coverage of agriculture. &amp;ldquo;Now we have The Art Farming and Times Women features.&amp;nbsp; These are specific pages and a weekly supplement on gender issues.&amp;nbsp; When it is not published, we get complaints from our readers,&amp;rdquo; she said.

Program organizer Marian Chigwedere of ZNBC said the project has taught her to &amp;ldquo;dig deeper&amp;rdquo; into agriculture issues -- beyond what the government reports. She said going out into the field has been invaluable. Reporters have been able to get many perspectives and angles for stories by talking to farmers and women in the field.

L&amp;rsquo;Essor&amp;nbsp; reporter Mariam Traore said that after participating in the program, she realized that she had overlooked marginalized women. &amp;ldquo;It was an eye opener for me,&amp;rdquo; she said, &amp;ldquo;As a journalist, I am more motivated to cover topics that relate to women&amp;rsquo;s fate.&amp;nbsp; People in the field trust me more. They talk to me when issues arise.&amp;rdquo;

In Uganda, &amp;ldquo;80 percent&amp;nbsp; of the country relies on agriculture, but I think there was a gap in agriculture reporting, said Cate Nambi of the Uganda Broadcasting Corporation. &amp;ldquo; All of the stories were shallow, and reporters just used what was in front of them.&amp;nbsp; Agriculture was covered as part of the business news and came at the end of it.&amp;nbsp; With the program, we were able to tell how interesting it can become when you travel out into the field. We were even able to convince our editors that this was important.&amp;rdquo;
&amp;nbsp;
Agriculture and science reporter Lominda Afedraru&amp;nbsp; of the Daily Monitor in Uganda said coverage has expanded. &amp;ldquo; The Monitor already had a farming page, but it was only one page and written by the same male reporter. Now, it is eight pages with the contributions of many reporters.&amp;rdquo;

Afedraru credits the program with changing the way agriculture is reported in the Daily Monitor.&amp;nbsp; Previous coverage focused on farmers within the city, but now the newspaper covers rural farmers and the issues they confront. 

Before the program, Afedraru said, &amp;ldquo;It was the accepted perspective at the paper that women did not talk to the press and that a reporter should always speak with the husband or male head of household only. The reporters have sought to work past this perspective and put forward the opinions of women and women farmers. When I joined the program, I was the only female reporter among many males. Increasingly, women shown interest and were added to the program.&amp;rdquo;

 &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;Edit Content&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 
</description> 
    <dc:creator>jpodesta</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 16 Feb 2011 16:47:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Winners of Global Digital News Frontier Grants Announced by IWMF</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1291/winners-of-global-digital-news-frontier-grants-announced-by-iwmf.aspx</link> 
    <description>For immediate release
February 15, 2011


Nadine Hoffman
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; (202) 496-1992 
nhoffman@iwmf.org




Winners of Global Digital News Frontier Grants Announced by IWMF
Three women-led new media projects to receive funding, training

WASHINGTON, D.C.&amp;nbsp; (Feb. 15, 2011) &amp;ndash; The International Women&amp;rsquo;s Media Foundation announced today the winners of the inaugural Women Entrepreneurs in the Global Digital News Frontier grants. Each grantee will receive $20,000 to launch innovative new media enterprises. 

&amp;nbsp;The winning startup projects include a website that brings transparency to the health care marketplace, a local journalism initiative that serves &amp;ldquo;news deserts&amp;rdquo; in the Catskills region of New York and a news service that takes a game-changing approach to international coverage.

The Women Entrepreneurs in the Global Digital News Frontier grant program -- offered for the first time this year -- is generously funded by the Ford Foundation. 

The award winners were selected from more than 100 proposals from a diverse array of entrepreneurial women journalists.&amp;nbsp; Key grant criteria included innovation in delivering the news and a clear business plan for achieving sustainability beyond the year-long grant program.

&amp;ldquo;Promoting women journalists&amp;rsquo; professional advancement -- in both traditional and new media -- is a central tenet of the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s mission,&amp;rdquo; Liza Gross, executive director of the IWMF said.&amp;nbsp; &amp;ldquo;We look forward to working with these pioneering women entrepreneurs as they launch their exciting digital media startups.&amp;rdquo;

&amp;ldquo;These grants, combined with training the IWMF will be offering, will help women to succeed in new media entrepreneurship, an arena where their numbers have been sorely lacking,&amp;rdquo; IWMF Advisory Committee Chairman Merrill Brown said.&amp;nbsp; &amp;ldquo;Each of the winners offers an innovative way to deliver the news, and they are truly at the forefront of the digital media frontier.&amp;rdquo; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;

The winners are:

Clearhealthcosts.com, the brainchild of former New York Times veteran editor and reporter Jeanne Pinder, will feature a curated collection of health care pricing information in a consumer-friendly, community-oriented, interactive website that combines reporting, user-generated content and databases to illuminate this largely opaque market.

Latitude, conceived by longtime BBC editor and producer and recent Nieman Fellow Maria Balinska, will approach international journalism by exploring connections between Americans and the rest of the world and promoting a deeper understanding of how the U.S. fits into the global news narrative. &amp;nbsp;

NewsShed, a spinoff enterprise of Julia Reischel and Lissa Harris&amp;rsquo;s regional news aggregator The Watershed Post, will create self-supporting news websites in small rural towns in the Catskills to build a sustainable model of online-only local journalism in these underserved and economically depressed communities.

In addition to grant funding, Pinder, Balinska, Reischel and Harris will receive pro-bono coaching from respected new media leaders on the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s Advisory Committee to ensure that they have the right match of support and skills to thrive as digital news entrepreneurs. &amp;nbsp;

Advisory Committee members and mentors include: Merrill Brown, Founder and Principal, MMB Media LLC; Eve Batey, Editor and Publisher, San Francisco Appeal; Christine Herron, Director, Intel Capital; Ben Metcalfe, Founder and CEO, Swordfish Corp; Neal Mohan, Vice President of Product Management, Google;&amp;nbsp; Andrew Nachison, Co-Founder and Managing Director, We Media; Shazna Nessa, Director of Interactive, the Associated Press; Mike Orren, Founder, Panlocal LLC/Pegasus News/The Daily You; Lisa Stone, CEO, BlogHer; and Lisa Williams, CEO and Founder, Placeblogger.com. &amp;nbsp;

The winners will also be featured on a panel moderated by The Washington Post&amp;rsquo;s Eugene Robinson during the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s International Conference of Women Media Leaders at George Washington University on March 23, 2011.

The IWMF will track the progress of the three winning projects&amp;rsquo; progress on the IWMF&amp;rsquo;s website.

Founded in 1990, The International Women&amp;rsquo;s Media Foundation is a vibrant global network dedicated to strengthening the role of women in news media worldwide as a means to further press freedom.&amp;nbsp; For more information, visit www.iwmf.org. 

</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 15 Feb 2011 21:16:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Matt Winkler</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1290/matt-winkler.aspx</link> 
    <description>Matthew Winkler is editor-in-chief of Bloomberg News, the global news service he founded with Michael Bloomberg in 1990 when he joined the then eight-year-old financial information company Bloomberg L.P. He became a member of the Bloomberg L.P. board in 2006.

Bloomberg News, which includes 1,500 editors and reporters in 150 bureaus serving print and broadcast media throughout North and South America, Europe and Asia, produces more than 5,000 stories daily on the economy, companies, governments, financial and commodity markets as well the arts and sports. Winkler received the 2007 Gerald Loeb Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award, recognizing ``exceptional career achievements in business, financial and economic news writing,&amp;rsquo;&amp;rsquo; the 2007 National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Emmy Lifetime Achievement Award for business and financial reporting and the 2003 New York Financial Writers' Association Elliott V. Bell Award for making a ``significant long-term contribution to the advancement of financial journalism.&amp;rsquo;&amp;rsquo; He received the National Council for Research on Women award in 2010 for promoting women. The Securities and Exchange Commission's ban on selective disclosure of corporate information, known as Reg FD, was prompted by Bloomberg News' reporting of market manipulation in the 1990s. 

Bloomberg News has received more than 400 awards, including: the Roy W. Howard for Public Service, George Polk, Gerald Loeb, Overseas Press Club, Sidney Hillman, Investigative Reporters &amp;amp; Editors, Society of Professional Journalists (Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles and New York chapters) and Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Bloomberg News provides content to the weekly Bloomberg Businessweek and monthly Bloomberg Markets magazines; 475 publications in 65 countries; Bloomberg Television and Radio, a 24-hour network reaching more than 350 million households worldwide.

Winkler is co-author of Bloomberg by Bloomberg, published April 1997 by John Wiley &amp;amp; Sons and author of The Bloomberg Way: A Guide for Reporters and Editors, published in September 2009 by Bloomberg Press. Between 1991 and 1994, he wrote the Capital Markets column for Forbes magazine. Between July 1980 and February 1990, Winkler was a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, Barron&amp;rsquo;s, and news services of parent Dow Jones &amp;amp; Co. in New York and in London. Winkler was a New York-based reporter and assistant editor at The Bond Buyer (1978-1980); and a reporter for the Ohio-based Mount Vernon News (1976-1977).

Winkler was born in New York City in 1955 and is a graduate of Kenyon College with an A.B. in history and an honorary doctorate of laws. He is a trustee of Kenyon College and The Kenyon Review; chairman of the board of the Knight-Bagehot 
Fellowship Program at Columbia University; a member of the Board of Visitors of Columbia College of Columbia University; a trustee of the business journalism program of the City University of New York; a director of the International Center for Journalists; a member of the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists; the Council on Foreign Relations, the Economic Club of New York and the International Advisory Board of the Tsinghua University School of Journalism in Beijing.</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Thu, 10 Feb 2011 18:56:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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    <title>Hu Shuli</title> 
    <link>http://67.199.49.174/archive/articletype/articleview/articleid/1289/hu-shuli.aspx</link> 
    <description>Hu Shuli is considered one of the most powerful media leaders in China and one of ten women to watch in Asia. Shuli founded Caijing Magazine and guided it to become one of China&amp;rsquo;s most authoritative business publications. 
At the editorial helm for 11 years, in 2009 she left to create the breakthrough new media company, Caixin Media. Shuli is currently editor-in-chief of Caixin Media, China Reform and Century&amp;nbsp;Weekly&amp;nbsp;magazine. 
Internationally recognized for her achievements in journalism, Shuli received the 2007 Louis Lyons Awards for Conscience and Integrity in Journalism from the Nieman Foundation at Harvard University. In Nov. 2009, Foreign Policy magazine named her one of Top 100 Global Thinkers, and in 2011,&amp;nbsp;Shuli was one of Time magazine&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;Top 100 Influential People&amp;rdquo;. She is also a 2012 winner of the Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism.

Shuli&amp;nbsp;earned a bachelor&amp;rsquo;s in journalism degree from the People&amp;rsquo;s University of China and an executive master&amp;rsquo;s in business administration through a program hosted by Fordham University and the China Center for Economic Research at Peking University.</description> 
    <dc:creator>rkothari</dc:creator> 
    <pubDate>Thu, 10 Feb 2011 18:46:00 GMT</pubDate> 
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