Pulitzer winners lecture series in Slovakia
Pulitzer Prize winning journalists visit Slovakia to meet young aspiring journalists and the Slovak public through the Best Media Traditions project. Read interviews with those who have visited Slovakia so far.
Three-time Pulitzer Prize winner will speak in Bratislava
Matt Apuzzo was awarded for his reporting on the surveillance of the Muslim community, Russia's impact on the US election and the consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Some people want to make the real world equivalent to a Facebook feed
You can criticise journalists, but calling them enemies is going too far.
If you’re looking at the internet, you should know how to read it
American journalist Dana Priest has been called a traitor for her revelations of secret “black site” prisons overseas.
Ian Johnson: Most people in China are not really aware of censorship
Watch the lecture of the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist delivered in Bratislava in early December.
It is not enough for elites to read a good newspaper
In a democracy, we need everybody to be well informed, but people are not necessarily willing to pay for quality, says Puitzer Prize-winning journalist Ian Johnson.
Pulitzer prize winning journalist: Public lecture in Bratislava and Košice
Ian Johnson will talk in Slovakia about the ideas, faiths, and values that underpin China's rise. Register now for the lecture for free.
Mendoza: A news story can change the world
Every journalist and editor has the responsibility to take a story beyond their daily beat, says Martha Mendoza, one of the team of four women who won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for their “Seafood from Slaves” investigation.
Pulitzer laureate: We need to pay attention to climate change now
Deborah Nelson, who won her Pulitzer Prize in 1997, has been reporting on environmental issues throughout her career. Her major report for Reuters, Water’s Edge, was published in 2014 and put a new perspective on reporting on climate change – “showing what is happening here and now, not only on the global scale but in people’s own backyards”.
This is the Golden Age of access
Pulitzer-winning James Steele says newspapers need investigative reporters to stand back from the rush of daily news and catch things that go under the radar
Investigative reporting still stands out
Deeply researched investigative reports of great importance cannot be replaced by tweets or blogs, says Walt Bogdanich, a three-time Pulitzer Prize winner for his investigative reports published in major American media outlets.
'Good journalism might make people mad'
GOOD journalism might make some people cancel their newspaper subscriptions, Pulitzer Prize winner Abigail Goldman said when admitting that journalists seem to have become overly worried about making people angry and are thus ready to compromise the very nature of their work.
Pulitzer winner talks media trends
THE WORLD of classified information is one of the main topics that Pulitzer Prize holder and National Book Award winner Tim Weiner has been devoted to for most of his career.
'Everybody is a walking journalist'
Everybody who wants to be a journalist can become one in the digital age, says Pulitzer-Prize-winning American journalist and academic Joshua Friedman.
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