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A World of Fellowship
Since international fellows were first admitted to the Nieman program in 1951, they have traveled to Harvard from 91 countries and territories around the world.
Some have escaped harsh regimes where censorship, threats of torture and imprisonment, physical violence or worse is too often the fate of practicing journalists. The Nieman Foundation has provided a safe haven to some of these imperiled journalists, providing a nurturing environment of support and encouragement. International journalists now comprise half of all Nieman classes.
Afghanistan · Albania · Argentina
Australia · Bangladesh · Belgium
Bolivia · Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil · Bulgaria · Burma · Burundi
Cameroon · Canada · Chile · China
Colombia · Costa Rica · Czech Republic
Denmark · Ecuador · Egypt · Finland
France · Gambia · Germany · Ghana
Greece · Guatemala · Hong Kong
Hungary · Iceland · India · Indonesia
Iran · Iraq · Ireland · Israel · Italy
Japan · Jordan · Kenya · Lebanon
Liberia · Malawi · Malaysia · Mexico
Morocco · Mozambique · Namibia
Nepal · Netherlands · New Zealand
Nigeria · Northern Ireland · Norway
Pakistan · Palestine · Panama
Paraguay · Peru · Philippines
Poland · Portugal · Republic of Georgia
Romania · Russia · Rwanda
Saudi Arabia · Serbia · Sierra Leone
Singapore · Slovakia · South Africa
South Korea · Spain · Sri Lanka
Sweden · Switzerland · Taiwan
Thailand · Tonga · Turkey · Uganda
United Kingdom · Uruguay
United States of America · Venezuela
Vietnam · Yugoslavia · Zimbabwe
Incoming Fellows
The 24 members of the 76th class of Nieman Fellows reporters, editors, columnists, digital media leaders and producers in print, broadcast and online who work around the globe and across media platforms.
Ameto Akpe
(Nigeria), senior reporter,
BusinessDay
, will study civil movements and their impact on governance, the nature of power and the relationship of citizens to the state. She also will research the impact and reception of U.S. soft power in the developing world. She is the 2014 Barry Bingham Jr. Nieman Fellow. Bingham, a 1956 Harvard graduate, was the editor and publisher of the
Courier-Journal
and
Louisville Times
in Kentucky.
Issac Bailey
, metro columnist and senior writer for
The Sun News
in Myrtle Beach, S.C., will study the intersection of race, sports and the economy in the American South, with a goal of using the research to understand efforts to battle illiteracy and improve cross-racial understanding in the region. He is the 2014 Donald W. Reynolds Nieman Fellow in Community Journalism.
Susie Banikarim
, a network television and video producer who has worked for ABC News’ “World News” and “This Week,” Newsweek &The Daily Beast and the talk show “Katie,” will study visual storytelling, specifically focusing on online video and economically viable models for online-only broadcast enterprises.
Uri Blau
(Israel), investigative journalist,
Haaretz
, will study entrepreneurial models for a sustainable, independent nonprofit investigative news platform in Israel and how that could form a base for cooperation among journalists from the Middle East.
Maria Lourdes “Nini” Cabaero
(Philippines), new media editor of the Sun.Star group of community newspapers, will study changing newsrooms and how small communities can use new media to gain equal access to national resources. Her fellowship is supported by the Ninoy and Cory Aquino Foundation (NCAF) and honors the memory of journalist Sandra Burton, who reported from the Philippines for
Time
magazine.
Tyler Cabot
, articles editor at
Esquire
, will study innovative ways of using digital technology to reimagine the way long-form journalism is created, bought and sold.
Tammerlin Drummond
, metro columnist for the Oakland Tribune/Bay Area News Group, will study urban gun violence as a public health emergency, prevention strategies and practices and ways that digital platforms can be used to disseminate information in urban communities plagued by gun homicides and other violent crimes.
Anna Fifield
(New Zealand), the U.S. political correspondent for the
Financial Times
, will study how change occurs in closed societies, focusing on Iran and the Middle East in the wake of the Arab Spring and looking at the commonalities between revolutions. She is the 2014 William Montalbano Nieman Fellow, named for a 1970 Nieman Fellow and
Los Angeles Times
reporter who reported from 100 countries during his 38-year career.
Leslie Hook
, Beijing correspondent for the
Financial Times
, will study the intersection of social media and environmental protests in China, with a particular focus on the growing impact of social media on political decisions and policymaking.
Flavia Krause-Jackson
(Italy/UK), diplomatic correspondent for Bloomberg News, will study the political and economic challenges and opportunities in Southeast Asia, using the democratization of Myanmar to investigate the influence of foreign investors, multiethnic representation and exogenous actors such as China on the region’s development. She is the 2014 Atsuko Chiba Nieman Fellow, named to honor the memory of Atsuko Chiba, a 1968 Nieman Fellow.
Alexandru-Cristian Lupsa
(Romania), editor of
Decât o Revista,
a Romanian journal of nonfiction, will study how narrative journalism can create personal and societal change and ways in which such change can be measured. He is the Robert Waldo Ruhl Nieman Fellow. Ruhl, a 1903 Harvard graduate, was editor and publisher of the
Medford Mail-Tribune
in Oregon from 1911-1967.
Alison MacAdam
, senior editor of National Public Radio’s “All Thing Considered,” will study how the arts intersect with business, law and technological innovation, and how cultural institutions are redesigning themselves for the future. MacAdam is the 2014 Arts and Culture Nieman Fellow.
Greg Marinovich
, (South Africa) associate editor,
Daily Maverick
, will study African syncretic religion and politics and issues of communal morality in times of conflict. His fellowship is supported by the Nieman Society of Southern Africa.
Ravi Nessman
, South Asia bureau chief for The Associated Press, will study the influence of religion on creating and alleviating poverty around the world and the responsibility of governments and communities to assist society’s most vulnerable members.
Laura-Julie Perreault
(Canada), a staff reporter who covers international affairs for
La Presse
, will study issues facing women combatants as well as state building and democratization in post-dictatorial states. Perreault is the 2014 Martin Wise Goodman Canadian Nieman Fellow, named for a fellow in the Nieman class of 1962.
Sangar Rahimi
(Afghanistan), reporter,
The New York Times
, will study banking fraud, money laundering, corruption and the misuse of power by politicians. He is the 2014 Carroll Binder Nieman Fellow. The Binder Fund honors 1916 Harvard graduate Carroll Binder, who expanded the Chicago Daily News Foreign Service, and his son, Carroll “Ted” Binder, a 1943 Harvard graduate.
Sandra Rodríguez Nieto
(Mexico), an investigative journalist, will study ways to develop sustainable online investigative and narrative journalism projects, focusing on governmental accountability and transparency in Mexico. She is the 2014 Ruth Cowan Nash Nieman Fellow. Nash was best known for her work as an Associated Press war correspondent during World War II.
Tim Rogers
, editor of
The Nicaragua Dispatch
, will study the evolving role that online media can play in non-democratic societies, focusing on how content sharing, free expression and interconnectivity contribute to democratization efforts.
Hasit Shah
(United Kingdom), senior producer, BBC News, will study the rapid growth and development of digital media in India and its impact on journalism, society, popular culture, political discourse, the economy and public policy.
Rachel Emma Silverman
, a management reporter at
The Wall Street Journal
, will study workplace design and how it affects collaboration and productivity. She also will explore how journalists can more effectively access new academic management research. Silverman is the 2014 Donald W. Reynolds Nieman Fellow in Business Journalism.
Wendell Steavenson
, Jerusalem-based staff writer for
The New Yorker
, will study the way history is memorialized in the Middle East and explore the theories behind the design of museums and how they contribute to a nation’s sense of its own identity.
Dina Temple-Raston
, counterterrorism correspondent for National Public Radio, will study the intersection of Big Data and the intelligence community to understand how information from Twitter and other social media can be used to predict and understand events in the future. She also will study the rise of Islam and the first caliphate to research how Shariah law might be included in the transitional governments of the Arab world. Temple-Raston is the first Murrey Marder Nieman Fellow in Watchdog Journalism. The fellowship honors the memory of Murrey Marder, a 1950 Nieman Fellow who helped found the Nieman Watchdog Project.
Yang Xiao
(China), Beijing correspondent and chief writer for the
Southern People Weekly
, with a special interest in democratic transition, will study comparative politics, democratic theory and courses related to China’s political and economic reforms. His fellowship at Harvard is supported through the Marco Polo Program of Sovereign Bank and Banco Santander.
Jeffrey R. Young
, senior editor and writer for
The Chronicle of Higher Education
, will study massive open online courses, or MOOCs, and how they will change higher education and the very nature of pedagogy. He is the Louis Stark Nieman Fellow; the fellowship honors the memory of the
New York Times
reporter who was a pioneer in the field of labor reporting.