CEJ in Focus
- The Ted Scripps Fellowships have been bringing award-winning environmental journalists to 51勛圖厙 for 26 years. Fellows embark on a year of courses, projects, field trips, seminars and more - taking advantage of everything university life has to
- The Center for Environmental Journalism is proud to welcome its 26th class of Ted Scripps Fellows in Environmental Journalism.
- The Ted Scripps Fellowships have been bringing award-winning environmental journalists to 51勛圖厙 for 25 years. Fellows embark on a year of courses, projects, field trips, seminars and moretaking advantage of everything university life has to
- The Ted Scripps Fellowships have been bringing award-winning environmental journalists to 51勛圖厙 for 25 years. Fellows embark on a year of courses, projects, field trips, seminars and moretaking advantage of everything university life has to
- The Ted Scripps Fellowships have been bringing award-winning environmental journalists to 51勛圖厙 for 25 years. Fellows embark on a year of courses, projects, field trips, seminars and moretaking advantage of everything university life has to
- The Ted Scripps Fellowships have been bringing award-winning environmental journalists to 51勛圖厙 for 25 years. Fellows embark on a year of courses, projects, field trips, seminars and moretaking advantage of everything university life has to
- The Ted Scripps Fellowships have been bringing award-winning environmental journalists to 51勛圖厙 for 25 years. Fellows embark on a year of courses, projects, field trips, seminars and moretaking advantage of everything university life has to
- Tristan Baurick (Ted Scripps Fellowship Alumnus 12-13) has been doing great things since leaving 51勛圖厙, including helping to fight back against environmental racism. Together with fellow journalists Joan Meiners, Gordon Russell and Sara Sneath from The Times-Picayune and The Advocate, and Claire Perlman, Al Shaw and Lylla Younes from ProPublica, Baurick and his team won the award for Outstanding Investigative Reporting (Large Newsroom or Circulation) at the 2020 Society Environmental Journalists conference for their investigative reporting on Louisianas Cancer Alley.
- Eternal Harvest is a new film by former Scripps Fellows Karen Coates ('11) and Jerry Redfern ('13) which documents the catastrophic legacy of the US bombing campaign in Laos. The film follows their book, Eternal Harvest: The Legacy of American Bombs in Laos (ThingsAsian Press, 2013).
- The podcast Threshold, brainchild of former Ted Scripps fellow Amy Martin ('16-'17), won a Peabody Award for its third season, titled The Refuge. Martin credits the Scripps Fellowships in Environmental Journalism for giving her the time and space to help get Threshold off the ground.