Event

Tuning In: Amy Martin Leads Podcasting Workshop at Yale

Winfred Obruk points to the lost beach in Shishmaref, Alaska, where the community's playground and fish-drying racks are now under water. The island faces rapid erosion due to the effects of climate change, and residents have voted twice to relocate. They are determined to move as a community, but while they try to navigate this costly and complicated process, the Chukchi Sea pushes ever-closer to their homes." Image by Nick Mott. United States, 2017.

Winfred Obruk points to the lost beach in Shishmaref, Alaska, where the community's playground and fish-drying racks are now under water. The island faces rapid erosion due to the effects of climate change, and residents have voted twice to relocate. They are determined to move as a community, but while they try to navigate this costly and complicated process, the Chukchi Sea pushes ever-closer to their homes." Image by Nick Mott. United States, 2017.

Wednesday, April 17, 2019 - 01:00pm EDT (GMT -0400)
Yale University
FES Student Lounge, Sage Hall
205 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06520
United States

On Wednesday, April 17, 2019, Pulitzer Center grantee Amy Martin will present on her reporting and lead a hands-on podcasting workshop for students studying climate change communication at Yale University in New Haven, CT.  

Martin is the founder and executive producer of Threshold, a podcast and public radio show that specializes in making complex environmental topics personal, immediate and real. Each season, Threshold explores one story of pivotal change from the natural world. Season one was focused on the American bison. Season two took listeners to communities across the Arctic, with support from the Pulitzer Center.

In addition to producing Threshold, Amy files stories for NPR’s All Things Considered, PRI’s The World, Here and Now, and other radio outlets.

Yale University is a Campus Consortium partner through its Program on Climate Change Communication.