Civic Journalism: The Public “Gets” It
Jan Schaffer, executive director of the Pew Center, describes the changing face of civic journalism -- new tools and techniques that remain true to old values.
Jan Schaffer, executive director of the Pew Center, describes the changing face of civic journalism -- new tools and techniques that remain true to old values.
Assistant Metro Editor Kamrhan Farwell of The Press-Enterprise in Riverside, CA, reflects on how a civic mapping project at the paper generated relevant and authentic stories on critical community issues.
Updates on 12 initiatives funded by the Pew Center that tackle tough issues, including education, growth, and development, medical ethics and living with cancer.
Don Heider, assistant professor of journalism at the University of Texas-Austin and author of "White News, Why Local News Programs Don't Cover People of Color," examines the dearth of diverse community coverage in news and offers pointers to remedy the problem.
The news organizations that won top honors at the 2001 Batten Symposium explain the visions that guided their projects and the resulting changes in their communities.
In his keynote address at the 2001 Batten Symposium, The Tampa Tribune's Publisher, Reid Ashe, discusses the importance of preserving the fundamentals of civic journalism in the face of the many challenges in journalism today.
The Pew Center's first four conferences of 2001 are an unqualified success. Catalyst category: Pew Updates
The 2001 Batten Award for Excellence in Civic Journalism goes to the Huntington Herald-Dispatch and West Virginia Public Broadcasting for "West Virginia After Coal," a project that examined the effects of a declining coal industry on communities and the use of coal severance taxes. The Eagle-Tribune of Lawrence, MA, and the Chronicle-Tribune of Marion, IN, were named runners-up while five other organizations garnered honorable mentions.