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30 June 2011

Photojournalism contest on health issues

Images to Stop Tuberculosis Photo Award



Tuberculosis is a contagious, airborne disease that continues to kill thousands of people every single day though preventable and treatable. Tuberculosis is a disease of poverty, affecting mostly adults in their most productive years. It damages economies, destroys families, and is keeping millions of people in poverty. Tuberculosis also is a leading killer among people living with HIV.

THE AWARD

The Images to Stop Tuberculosis Photo Award seeks to produce a comprehensive body of photographic work on tuberculosis to be used for advocacy purposes. An international jury will select a photographer who will receive a grant to produce a photo reportage depicting tuberculosis. The jury includes photography experts from around the world.

Read more about the 2011 award [.pdf]

PARTNERS

The Images to Stop Tuberculosis Photo Award is supported by the Lilly MDR-TB Partnership and is developed with the generous guidance of world renowned photo-journalist Gary Knight.

CONTACT

For more information, please contact:
Sam Nuttall
Communications Officer
Telephone: +41 22 791 5876
nuttalls@who.int

CSE's 3rd South Asian Media Fellowship on Water barred: need or greed?

Water barred: need or greed? South Asian water bodies, community and 'development'

August 2011 – November 2011

For journalists from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka

In its 58th session, the United Nations General Assembly had proclaimed 2005-2015 as the 'International Decade for Action – Water for Life'. The ‘decade’ is nearing its end, and water and access to it remains a mirage across South Asia. Lack of proper water management, population pressure, pollution, climate change are amongst some of the key reasons for the prevalent situation.

Added to this crippling demand-supply scenario is another aspect: industrial growth and urbanisation rapidly gnawing away at available water sources, leading to strife and conflicts with local communities and farmers.

Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) offers a media fellowship to journalists across South Asia to research, analyse and report on this subject. Some of the suggested topics which may be examined are:

The state of water bodies (wetlands, lakes, rivers, streams etc)

Mapping and methods of mapping of water bodies

Water versus development

Regulations and laws

Success stories and best practices

Duration

Three months – August, 2011 to November, 2011 – with one month of travel time and the other two month for research, writing, publication and submission of stories and features.

Compensation and funding

Selected fellows will each receive a stipend of INR 50,000 (subject to tax deductions at source) to support research, travel and writing between the given period.

The stipend will be released in two installments – the first as a travel grant at the start of the fellowship programme and the second after its successful completion.

Who can apply

These fellowships are open to journalists from Bangladesh, Maldives, Bhutan, Nepal, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Sri Lanka only, including freelancers, photojournalists and television/video journalists.

Applications must be accompanied by the following documents:

Curriculum vitae

For print journalists, three samples of published work on development issues. By ‘published work’, we mean articles published by / in national or regional newspapers or magazines. Those writing in regional languages must have at least one of their articles translated into English.

For television and radio journalists, two samples of telecasted / broadcasted programmes on development issues – those telecasting / broadcasting in regional languages must also give a short written summary of the programme along with the CDs of the samples.

A letter of support from the editor that the output under the fellowship will be published / broadcast (mandatory for all candidates, including freelancers).

A comprehensive fellowship proposal outlining (a) the subject/s and story ideas that the applicant proposes to focus on, (b) tentative travel plans and (c) a list of people who might be interviewed.

Last date for submission of applications:  July 15, 2011

CSE may organise a briefing workshop on the subject closer to the commencement of the Fellowship. The selected Fellows and some other interested journalists will be invited to participate in this workshop.

Fellowships output

Selected applicants from the print media will be expected to generate feature and news article/s totalling 5,000 words or three stories, based on the research carried out under the fellowship.

Original clippings of these articles will have to be submitted at the completion of the fellowship programme. They will also be expected to take and submit photographs of the areas they travel in for their stories.

Selected applicants from the audio-visual media will be expected to generate either a single film/broadcast or a series of episodes, based on the research carried out under the fellowships. Video and audio CDs of these outputs will have to be submitted at the completion of the fellowship programme.

Applications for the fellowship should be addressed to:

Papia Samajdar
Assistant Coordinator
Media Resource Centre
Centre for Science and Environment
41, Tughlakabad Institutional Area
New Delhi 110 062
Ph: 011-29955124, 29955125, Fax: 011-29955879
Mobile: 9811906977
Email: papia@cseindia.org

The Daniel Pearl Awards for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting

Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was slain by militants in Pakistan in 2002.

The Daniel Pearl Awards for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting are unique among journalism prizes worldwide in that they were created specifically to honor cross-border investigative reporting. Formerly the ICIJ Awards, the prizes were renamed in 2008 in honor of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, who was slain by militants in Pakistan in 2002.

The two $5,000 first-place prizes and five $1,000 finalist awards recognize, reward, and foster excellence in cross-border investigative journalism. In addition, the judges at their discretion may award a special citation for work that is unusually enterprising or done under especially challenging circumstances. Past ICIJ award winners have reported about abuses faced by immigrants in American workplaces; the involvement of Sweden in the CIA secret renditions program; and allegations of sexual exploitation of Congolese women and children by United Nations peacekeepers, among other issues of world importance. Fredrik Laurin of TV4 Sweden, Jeffrey Goldberg of The New Yorker, and Steve Bradshaw and Mike Robinson of BBC News Panorama have received the award in recent years.

The competition, held biennially, is open to any professional journalist or team of journalists of any nationality working in any medium. The main criterion for eligibility is that the investigation — either a single work or a single-subject series — involves reporting in at least two countries on a topic of world significance. A five-member jury of international journalists selects the winners.

Two $5,000 first prizes are awarded: one to a U.S.-based reporter or news organization and the other to a non-U.S.-based journalist or news organization.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists was launched in 1997 as a project of the Center for Public Integrity to extend globally the Center’s style of watchdog journalism in the public interest. One hundred ICIJ journalists from 50 countries combine talents to provide groundbreaking, in-depth reporting in an increasingly globalized and networked world.


AWARDS CRITERIA

To apply for the Daniel Pearl Awards for Outstanding International Investigative Reporting, follow the guidelines below and complete a Pearl Awards Application Form. Incomplete entries, as well as those that arrive after the deadline, will be disqualified.

Applicants:
Any professional journalist or team of journalists of any nationality is eligible to submit an individual investigative piece of work, or single-subject series, on a transnational topic of world significance. Works produced in print, broadcast, and online media are eligible; books are not eligible. In the case of a team of journalists, the first name listed on the application shall be deemed to be the designated representative of the team.

Criteria:
Work must have been first published or broadcast in general information media between January 1, 2010, and July 1, 2011. The story or series must involve on-the-ground reporting in at least two countries. Work is eligible without regard to the language in which it originally appeared. However, entries submitted in the original language must be accompanied by a comprehensive story summary in English. English-language subtitles on video entries are preferred but not mandatory. Audio entries should be sent on CD, with accompanying script; video entries on DVD format, with accompanying script. Six copies of each submission are required. No e-mail submissions accepted.

Submission Letter:
Include a brief synopsis of the story/series and explain the background of the project, identifying the issues and key players. Describe what led you to the topic, any unusual conditions you or your team faced in developing the project, and whether the investigation had any ramifications. If there were any challenges to the content of the story/series that were not reported in the original work, you must describe them in your letter. The submission letter should be in English and no longer than two typed pages. Curriculum vitae must be submitted for every reporter named in the entry.

Entry Fee:
None.

Deadline:
All entries must be postmarked no later than July 1, 2011. Only one entry per applicant is allowed.

Selection:
A five-member international jury of journalists and/or journalism educators will select the Pearl Awards winner and finalists.

Presentation:
Awards are made payable to the individual journalist responsible for the winning work or, in the case of a team of journalists, to the team’s designated representative. The Pearl Awards will be announced at the Global Investigative Journalism Conference in Kiev, Ukraine, in October 2011.

Signature and Permission:
The signature of the applying journalist (or the applying team’s designated representative) is required. If the copyright to the work is not owned by the applying journalist or team of journalists, the signature of the copyright owner (or its authorized representative) is also required. The signature grants ICIJ a non-exclusive, royalty-free, irrevocable license to reproduce, publish, and distribute the work (in whole or in part) in any Center for Public Integrity/ICIJ publication in any media if the applicant is selected as a finalist or winner.


AWARDS APPLICATION

FULL NAME OF REPORTER(S):
POSTAL ADDRESS:

E-MAIL ADDRESS:
WORK AND HOME TELEPHONE:

COMPANY CONTACT, E-MAIL AND TELEPHONE (IF APPLICABLE):

EMPLOYER (IF FREELANCER, PLEASE STATE):
ADDRESS OF EMPLOYER:
HOW DID YOU HEAR ABOUT THE AWARD:

TITLE OF ENTRY:
DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY:
COUNTRIES IN WHICH REPORTING WAS DONE (THE REPORTER PHYSICALLY TRAVELED THERE):

MEDIUM:
WHERE/WHEN WORK WAS FIRST PUBLISHED OR BROADCAST:
SIGNATURE OF APPLICANT(S) AUTHORIZING PERMISSION TO REPRINT WORK (REQUIRED):

DATE:

Six copies of the published or broadcast entry, the submission letter, and curriculum vitae must accompany this application. Submit to:

ICIJ @ THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY
910 17TH STREET NW, 7TH FLOOR
WASHINGTON, DC 20006, USA

TEL: 202-466-1300 FAX: 202-466-1101
E-MAIL: sraetz@icij.org
WEB: http://www.publicintegrity.org/investigations/icij/

23 June 2011

South Asia Media Commission ‘shocked’ at defeat of RTI Bill

The South Asia Media Commission (SAMC) on Wednesday expressed shock and dismay at Sri Lanka’s Parliament voting down a bill for the enactment of a Right to Information law for the country.

Though Sri Lanka has ratified the International Convention on Civil & Political Rights, which includes the Right to Information, the country is yet to incorporate it into a domestic law, the Lahore, Pakistan, based Media Commission points out. The SAMC is a regional media rights watchdog affiliated to the South Asian Free Media Association (SAFMA).

“In the light of Sri Lanka’s ratification of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights and the previous agreement with all other SAARC member states about the need for such legislation and the formulation of this bill several years ago with the stated intention of the then government to legislate, today’s defeat of the RTI bill is a highly retrogressive step for Sri Lanka,” said the statement issued jointly by SAMC President Kumar Ketkar and Secretary General Najam Sethi.

The RTI law in Sri Lanka was first suggested in the early 1990s. In 2003, the bill was drafted but not passed as a result of the change in government. Then it was presented as an individual Bill by an opposition United National Party (UNP) parliamentarian Karu Jayasuriya and withdrawn on a request made by the government with a pledge that it would present a Right to Information Act shortly. Due to the government's failure to present such a piece of legislation, the Bill was presented for the second time on Tuesday. Sri Lanka’s ruling party lawmakers defeated the bill with a majority of 63 votes.

“The bill, drafted and kept in abeyance for several years without any action for enactment by successive governments, has been summarily rejected without even proposing any amendments. People’s right to information is an integral part of a functioning democracy. Given the previous commitments to such legislation by the Government of Sri Lanka as well as the general national political leadership of the country, this abrupt rejection of legislation is unacceptable,” the SAMC leaders said.

“We join Sri Lanka’s civil society in questioning the motive and rationale for the outright and sudden rejection of this vital legislation. Absence of the Right to Information law means absence of transparency. This prevents effective people’s participation in law and policy making processes. Consensual deliberations at the regional SAARC level had given much hope to the media people and human rights activists in the region. But those hopes have been dashed,” they said.

Sri Lanka has no legislation guaranteeing access to official information. A number of statutes limit access to information either directly or by imposing severe and unwarranted restrictions on media freedom. Ninety countries worldwide including four in the South Asian region, namely, Pakistan, India, Nepal and Bangladesh, have implemented the RTI law.

21 June 2011

Scholarship for young photojournalists

Deadline: 30/06/11
Ian Parry Scholarship
Full-time photography students and photographers age 24 or under can apply for a scholarship.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/scholarship-young-photojournalists-accepting-applications-worldwide

The Ian Parry Scholarship is designed to help young documentary photographers undertake a chosen project and raise their profile in the international photography community. It is named after photographer Ian Parry, who died on assignment in Romania at the age of 24.

The top prize is UK£3,000 (about US$4900) and UK£500 (about US$820) for runners-up. The Sunday Times Magazine publishes a selection of images from the competition and World Press Photo automatically nominates the winner for the Joop Swart Masterclass.

For more information, click here.

Global activist award

Deadline: 30/06/11
Journalists can apply for an international activist award.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/global-activist-award-accepting-nominations-worldwide

Organized by the Harvard Kennedy School Center for Public Leadership, The Gleitsman International Activist Award was created in 1993 by the late Alan Gleitsman to honor leadership in social activism that has improved the quality of life in countries and inspired others to do the same.

Past winners from the journalism field include the three founders of website Global Witness in 2009.

The honoree receives $125,000 and a sculpture designed by Maya Lin, creator of the Vietnam War Memorial. The winner will be announced fall 2011.

For more information, click here.

Media for Liberty journalism award

Deadline: 09/01/12
Liberty Media
Journalists who cover society and economics can apply for an award.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/media-liberty-journalism-award-open-worldwide

The Media for Liberty Award is open to journalists who work on societal issues, economies, political structures and cultures that illustrate their pursuit of a free market environment and civil liberties uninfluenced by government agenda.

The most outstanding entry receives a US$50,000 prize.

Sample topics include but are not limited to: government involvement in private enterprise, dependence on foreign oil, access to healthcare, sovereign debt, basic goods (food, housing, healthcare) becoming prohibitively expensive for middle-class consumers and the cost of globalization from a societal, cultural, economic perspective.

Entries must be published or transmitted via print or electronic media between January 1 and December 31, 2011. Eligible media outlets must be generally recognized in their markets and accessible to a broad audience in the United States.

Prize sponsors Liberty Media seek to acknowledge and encourage media contributions that explore the relationship between economic and political liberty.

For more information, click here.

Photo contest about entrepreneurs

Deadline: 30/06/11
The Seven Fund
Non-profit organization the Seven Fund seeks entries from around the world for a photo contest about entrepreneurs.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/photo-contest-about-entrepreneurs-open-worldwide

The goal of the photo competition is to inspire photographers and document entrepreneurs leading training programs and running for-profit businesses in ethical ways.

The Seven Fund is a non-profit organization that aims to change the terms of discourse surrounding poverty by presenting entrepreneurs in a new light.

The competition will award four prizes (US$250), one every three months, as well as a grand prize (US$1,000) that will recognize one of the final four photographs as the overall competition winner.

Photo submissions should include the phrase “I am an entrepreneur” in the local or indigenous language of the subject in the photograph. Entries can be in color or black and white.

All photos must be digital and in .jpg format. Deadlines for photo submissions are June 30, September 30 and December 15. The grand prize will be awarded December 30.

For more information, click here.

Fellowships send journalists to cover climate change summit

Date: 26/11/11 - 10/12/11
Deadline: 30/06/11
The Climate Change Media Partnership (CCMP)

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/fellowships-sends-journalists-cover-climate-change-summit-worldwide

Journalists interested in understanding the impact of climate change are invited to apply for a fellowship.

The Climate Change Media Partnership (CCMP) offers this fellowship predominately to journalists from developing countries, but this year journalists from the U.S. and Russia are also eligible.

Fellowship recipients will be sent to cover the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Durban and will be asked to provide summaries of their reports throughout their stay. By the end of the conference, fellows will have gained a deeper understanding of the global impact of climate change by exchanging ideas and working with their peers from around the world.

As a part of the fellowship, the CCMP will cover all travel, lodging and daily costs, in addition to providing fellows with activities, an orientation session, breakfast briefings, a field trip and a media clinic.

Interested journalists need to submit two samples of their work from the past 12 months, a letter of recommendation and the online application form by June 30.

For more information, click here.

Fund for Environmental Journalism

Deadline: 15/07/11
Society of Environmental Journalists

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/fund-environmental-journalism-accepting-grant-proposals-worldwide

Journalists worldwide can apply for grants up to US$3,500 to report on environmental projects and entrepreneurial ventures around the globe.

The Society of Environmental Journalists (SEJ) are funding these grants in order to provide incentives and support to journalists who are building an environmental platform and are struggling financially to complete the project.

The funds should serve to cover project-related travel, training, research materials, environmental testing and other direct expenses that pertain to the completion of the project.

Both SEJ members and non-members are able to apply for the grants, as long as their work is within the journalism field. All applications must be submitted by July 15. Note that all non-members must pay a US$20 application fee.

For more information, click here.

13 June 2011

EU seeks communications specialists

Date: 01/06/11 - 28/06/11
Deadline: 28/06/11
European Union
Professionals with communications experience and media backgrounds can apply for positions with the European Union.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/eu-seeks-communications-specialists-worldwide

The European Union is recruiting communications professionals for positions based in the European Parliament, the Council or the Committee of the Regions.

Applicants should have a university degree, two years of experience in media and communications and a perfect command of English, German or French.

Applicants for the EU Communications Specialist position should have a university degree (of at least three years) in the field of communication, media studies, journalism or public relations.

Applicants will be asked to elaborate on their professional experience in the field of communication, media, journalism and public relations.

Experience related to communication on EU affairs is also a valuable asset. The whole selection procedure can take between five and nine months. The EU offers competitive salaries and may offer relocation assistance. The positions are open to citizens outside the EU-27.

Additionally, the EU is specifically recruiting people with fluency in one of the following: Dutch, English, Estonian, French, Polish, Portuguese, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish and Swedish.

For more information, click here.

UPI seeks radio, broadcast and multimedia mentors

UPI seeks mentors to work with closely with professors at journalism schools to create virtual workshops for students.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/upi-seeks-radio-broadcast-and-multimedia-mentors-worldwide

Mentor will work closely with professors at journalism schools to create virtual workshops (conducted primarily via Skype and other software) for students. Mentor will review content produced by students and work directly with students to help them succeed.

Applicants should have:

· Extensive experience in the journalism industry in radio, broadcast or multimedia fields.(Experience in all three areas is a plus, but applicants with extensive experience in one or two areas will be considered.)

· Passion for helping young journalists kick-start their careers.

· A flexible schedule that allows for video conferencing with students and classrooms around the world.

· An understanding of the seismic shifts in the journalism industry, and ideas about how to help students navigate those shifts.

· Willingness to engage with students via social media, blogging and other formats.

· High comfort level with Skype video chat and other video conferencing software.

This is a part-time, contract position. Mentor(s) will work with Washington, DC-based mentoring team, but are not required to live in the Washington, DC area.

For more information, click here.

UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism Fellowship

Deadline: 01/07/11
UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism
Journalists specializing in online news operations can apply for fellowship.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/uc-berkeley-graduate-school-journalism-fellowship

The UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism offers a fellowship program open to all journalists with prior experience in business and news organizations. This candidate will help develop economic business models for three local news sites –MissionLocal.org, OaklandNorth.net and RichmondConfidential.org– laboratories dedicated to training graduate students on reporting and serving as incubators for innovation in digital news.

The candidate must have business development experience, preferably in entrepreneurship, because they will be inventing new ways to monetize the news websites through advertising, subscriptions, memberships, coupons, sales, partnerships etc. Preference be given to those with experience in Illustrator or Photoshop design.

This is a full-time, one year-long program begins on August 1.

All applicants will be chosen based on their qualifications and dedication to community news. The fellowship will range from US$68,748 to US$86,316 per years, depending on experience.

For more information, click here.

The Muhr awards for Arab, Emirati, Asian and African films

Deadline: 31/08/11
Filmmakers from Asia and Africa and the Arab world, whose subjects are related to their regions, are eligible to submit their films to participate in the competition.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/muhr-awards-arab-emirati-asian-and-african-films-accepting-submissions

The Muhr awards for Arab, Emirati, Asian and African cinema and With a slogan of "Bridging Cultures, Meeting Minds," the Dubai International Film Festival organizes the Muhr competition that presents 31 awards and more than US$575,000 in prize money in the categories of short films, features and documentaries.

Submitted films must have been produced after September 1, 2010. Deadline to apply is August 31, 2011.

The festival also invites filmmakers from around the world to submit their work and documentaries for out-of-competition screening. These films must not have been previously screened in the Gulf region.

Updates about the Festival, scheduled for December 7-14, are available on its Facebook page.

For more information,click here.

Video contest on media ethics

Deadline: 21/08/11
Video contest on media ethics

Journalists interested in media ethics can enter a video contest.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/video-contest-media-ethics-open-worldwide


The Center for International Media Ethics (CIME) has launched a new contest for one-minute videos about censorship, accuracy, truth (slander/libel), sensationalism and privacy.

The winner video will be the official CIME film for a year and will be invited to participate in a media ethics online training and be entitled to invite five friends to join the course.

CIME is a non-profit organization that brings together a network of journalists throughout the world to provide training, discussion and expertise in the ethics of their profession.

Media ethics is extremely important and we aim to share this with the rest of the world. In order to do so we welcome creative - not necessarily experienced - video makers to showcase their talent and original ideas that represent good media ethics at work.

For more information, click here.

Travel scholarship for video makers

Deadline: 16/06/11
WorldNomads.com
Journalists interested in creating documentaries can apply for travel scholarship to Australia.

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/deadline-approaching-travel-scholarship-video-makers-open-worldwide

World Nomads is accepting applications for a travel documentary scholarship. The winner will spend seven days with the Arnhem Land Marine Rescue Program with World Expeditions, filming the remote Yolngu Aboriginal communities.

Only non-professional documentary makers are eligible to apply. Anyone over 18 with a valid passport is eligible to apply.

The winner will create their own short documentary under producer Trent O’Donnell to air on the National Geographic Adventure Channel. The value of the prize is approximately AU$5895 (about US$6,270).

For more information, click here.