JSK names international journalism fellows for 2023-2024
The John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships will welcome seven journalism leaders from Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America to Stanford University to be part of the JSK Class of 2023-24.
Beginning in September, these JSK Fellows will pursue a range of innovative ideas that seek to champion press freedom in a world where journalists and independent media are increasingly under attack.This is the second year that JSK will focus its international fellowships on supporting journalists who want to work on ideas that respond to threats to independent reporting, some from countries where it is dangerous to be a journalist. These threats run the gamut from imprisonment and physical danger, to intimidation, financial pressure and government censorship. They also include disinformation campaigns that fuel hostility toward journalists, often resulting in dangerous misinformation for its citizens.
“We believe the growing level of hostility to journalists by repressive regimes and the deterioration of press freedom across the globe are challenges that need the focus and attention of the JSK Fellowships and this group of talented international journalists to work toward solutions.” — Dawn Garcia, JSK Director
The next JSK Fellowships class will include journalists from Afghanistan, Austria, Czechia, Georgia, Mexico, the Netherlands and Nigeria.
Before coming to Stanford, these journalists have begun projects to fight misinformation in Nigeria; helped finish the investigative stories of a murdered colleague in Slovakia and sought to improve media coverage of gender violence in Mexico. One led a team using pioneering open source reporting methods for investigations, including the assassination of a journalist in Palestine and murders of civilians in Ukraine. One journalist was forced to flee the Taliban, helping employees of his women’s news agency come to the U.S., where he has continued to run his organization in exile. Another created a news organization in Georgia to cover misinformation and global networks that are being built by authoritarians. A digital journalist from Austria reported on the collapse of the former Austrian government, which had planned to strictly reduce the financial and journalistic independence of Austrian media.Throughout their 10 months at Stanford, the fellows will connect with Stanford resources and experts, participate in tailored workshops, individual coaching and peer-to-peer learning to grow as effective change agents and leaders, to seek solutions to the most urgent problems facing journalism.
“We are eager to bring these terrific journalists to Stanford and have them make use of the vast resources available at one of the world’s top universities,” Garcia said. “Their work could not be more urgent or needed.”These seven international fellows will join a thriving JSK community. More than 1,000 people from more than 80 countries have participated in journalism fellowships at Stanford since the program first began in 1966.JSK will be announcing the 2023-24 U.S. Fellows in early May.