Campus Consortium member

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

The Pulitzer Center’s connections with Southern Illinois University Carbondale are deep: Bill Freivogel, on our original Advisory Council, is the former director of SIUC’s Department of Journalism and a long-time friend and colleague of Pulitzer Center Executive Director Jon Sawyer from their days at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. SIUC was one of the founding charter members of the Pulitzer Center Consortium when it formally launched in January 2009. SIUC began as Illinois’ second teachers college in 1869 with a dozen academic departments and an inaugural class of 143. It now ranks among Illinois’ most comprehensive public universities.

SIUC’s School of Journalism is housed in the College of Mass Communication & Media Arts. Kavita Karan is the School's interim director. WSIU Public Broadcasting operates Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) television stations and National Public Radio (NPR) radio stations.

The annual Big Muddy Film Festival is an international event with competition screenings, documentary and narrative feature screenings, panel discussions and guest presentations of independent, non-traditional films. The School of Journalism is one of only five accredited journalism programs in Illinois, with an excellent traditional print newspaper, the Daily Egyptian, which as the school's website notes "serves as the flagship for a curriculum that goes way beyond chemicals on dead trees.”

Connected with the school is the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, which hosts numerous nationally renowned speakers and panelists on issues such as war, politics and the impact of digital media.

http://www.siu.edu/
http://journal.siu.edu/
http://mcma.siu.edu/

Nepal: Water Rights on the Koshi River

While Nepal’s hydropower potential is great, economic, health and environmental impacts from dams are emerging. Steve Matzker and Jennifer Gonzalez explore water rights issues in the region.

Agriculture and Jamaica’s Rural Poor

This project looks at the paradox of Jamaican agriculture: an abundant supply of fish, fruits and vegetables while farmers struggle to find financial success.

Niger: Feeding the Forgotten

A Niger drought means there is not enough food to feed the country; United Nations reports estimate 7.9 million inhabitants are facing food shortages there.