Event

Keeping Silenced Journalists’ Work Alive

Image courtesy of Global Investigative Journalism Network.

Image courtesy of Global Investigative Journalism Network.

Thursday, February 4, 2021 - 09:00am EST (GMT -0500)
Online
Register Today

Practicing investigative journalism can be extraordinarily dangerous in much of the world. Reporting on corruption and human rights has claimed the lives of more journalists than working in war zones, as powerful people seek to silence the stories the press investigates. And they do it with impunity, with conviction rates for murdering journalists at just 14 percent. Often, the only way to keep journalists’ reporting alive is through collaboration.

On Thursday, February 4, at 9am EST, join the online conversation with five investigative journalists from Mexico, France, India, and the United States, moderated by Pulitzer Center Executive Editor Marina Walker Guevara and organized by the Global Investigative Journalism Network. The following panelists will offer tips and tools on how to continue the work of murdered journalists, with a focus on working collaboratively and across borders:

  • Jorge Carrasco is director of Proceso, the largest political magazine in Mexico, where journalist Regina Martinez worked when she was murdered. Carrasco has worked as a correspondent, political writer, and investigative reporter covering corruption and transnational crime. He has been part of projects coordinated by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalism (ICIJ), including the Panama Papers.
  • Dana Priest has been a reporter at The Washington Post for 30 years. She has covered the Pentagon, intelligence agencies, Russian disinformation operations, veterans issues, to name a handful. She won two Pulitzer Prizes, for reporting on conditions at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center (2008) and the CIA’s secret prisons and other counterterrorism operations (2006).
  • Sandhya Ravishankar is a political and investigative journalist. Based in Chennai, she is the founder and editor of The Lede, an independent digital journalism start-up that focuses on stories in five South Indian states. She won India’s top journalism prize, the Ramnath Goenka Award, in 2018 for her series of exposés on illegal sand mining in Tamil Nadu.
  • Laurent Richard is a French documentary filmmaker, producer, and founder of Forbidden Stories, a network of investigative journalists devoted to keeping the stories of slain journalists alive. Richard has directed documentaries for 20 years. He was a Knight-Wallace Fellow in 2017 at the University of Michigan and was named European Journalist of the Year 2018 by the Prix Europa in Berlin.
  • Sandrine Rigaud is Forbidden Stories’ editor in chief and is a documentary filmmaker with many directorial titles to her credit. She has directed feature-length documentaries, investigating the corporate sector while working at Première Lignes Télévision, and previously worked as an investigative reporter for the program Cash Investigation, covering a wide range of stories.