Women War Correspondents: They Are Different in So Many Ways By Anthony Feinstein and Mark Sinyor• Diversity• December 11, 2009 ‘It is not by chance that these women have gravitated to the frontlines of war.’ Read more
Your Eyes Say That You Have Cried By Masoud Behnoud• Diversity• June 15, 2009 ‘Today’s generation of Iranian women reporters are doing big things. Their mark will be left on history.’ Read more
Iranian Journalist: A Job With Few Options By Roza Eftekhari• Diversity• June 2, 2009 After working for more than a decade at the now banned Iranian magazine Zanan, a journalist now in the United States describes her feelings of identity, location and loss. Read more
Telling the Stories of Iranian Women’s Lives By Shahla Sherkat• Diversity• June 2, 2009 ‘Anyone who did research on women’s issues benefitted from hundreds of articles, stories and interviews that were featured in Zanan.’ Read more
The Spanish-Language Press Delves Into Racial Complexities By Elena Shore• Diversity• June 15, 2008 ‘Most notable was the story line in which Latino voters were described in ways that made them seem monolithic.’ Read more
Challenges Native and Non-Native Journalists Confront By Jodi Rave• Diversity• September 15, 2005 Those who tell Indian people’s stories are ‘expected to be truthful, responsible, accurate and excellent communicators.’ Read more
Broadcast News: The Absence of Native Storytellers By Mark Trahant• Diversity• September 15, 2005 Without American Indian journalists, potential news stories are untold and the complexities of issues aren’t addressed. Read more
Finding a Different Path Into the Newsroom By Denny McAuliffe• Diversity• September 15, 2005 For Native students, a summer journalism institute, an online newspaper, and internships can lead to full-time jobs. Read more
Why Journalists Can’t Talk Across Race By Dori J. Maynard• Diversity• September 15, 2003 ‘What we found is a conversation fraught with frustration and mistrust.’ Read more
Newsroom Diversity: Truth vs. Fiction By Bryan Monroe• Diversity• September 15, 2003 Before and after the Times’s debacle, American newspapers are still ‘telling our readers an incomplete, inaccurate story.’ Read more