Investigazioni pantropicali: collaborazioni su crimini ambientali e distruzione
Ven 19 aprile 2024
12:00 - 12:50
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Controversies around environmental issues such as the carbon credit market, the export of illegal timber, toxic gold mining, and deadly land disputes are common features for journalists working in tropical countries. In South America, Central Africa and Southeast Asia reporters often come face to face with stories that are complex, dangerous, and go beyond national borders. These stories deal with sectors that often involve illegalities, creating risks and ethical dilemmas for reporters. For example, how to depict the involvement of communities in illegal practices without losing focus on the systems that lead to the destruction of biodiversity and threaten the survival of the communities themselves? At the same time, where to find data and evidence that allows us to connect major international supply chains with the damages that are exacerbating climate change?
To uncover the influence of these supply chains on the environment, journalists work collaboratively across borders. In this panel, made up of one journalist from each of the world's tropical regions, we will discuss the problems they face during their investigations, such as risks during the field work and pressure from governments and companies. The panel will include three journalists, one from Colombia, one from Cameroon and another from Cambodia who have taken part in collaborations that expose illegal timber extraction, land disputes in indigenous territories and wildlife trafficking.
Organised in association with Rainforest Investigations Network.
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Palazzo Graziani (Perugia)
Costruzione di origine medioevale Palazzo Graziani è stato sottoposto ad interventi che nel corso dei secoli ne hanno modificato ed ampliato la struttura. Situato in Corso Vannucci, l’immobile è sede della Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio ed ora anche della nuova Fondazione CARIPERUGIA ARTE. Nel 1895 Annibale Brugnoli realizzò quattro grandi quadri ad olio sulle pareti e quattro grandi dipinti murali sulla volta di quello che successivamente venne chiamato “Salone del Brugnoli”, ancora oggi la sala di maggior pregio dell’intero complesso.
Anton L. Delgado
Anton L. Delgado is a multimedia journalist for the Southeast Asia Globe, covering news and the environment across the region. Before moving to Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital, to join the Globe, Delgado covered the environment for the Arizona Republic as part of USA TODAY. Originally from the Philippines, Delgado spent several years studying and reporting in the U.S. In 2020, Delgado received the Pulitzer Center’s Campus Consortium Reporting Fellowship and covered the resurgence of leprosy in Brazil. He also has reporting experience in Morocco and Jordan. He has published stories in partnership with outlets in the US and Canada about illegalities behind the trade of native macaques.
Gustavo Faleiros
Gustavo Faleiros is the director of environmental investigations at the Pulitzer Center, where he coordinates the Rainforest Investigations Network. Based in São Paulo, Brazil, he is an environmental journalist and media trainer specializing in data-driven journalism. In 2012, he launched InfoAmazonia, a digital platform that uses satellite imagery and other publicly available data to report on the nine Amazon rainforest countries.
Josiane Kouagheu
Josiane Kouagheu is an award-winning Cameroonian journalist who has covered the civil war, human rights abuses, and health issues for Le Monde Afrique and Reuters, among others. In 2020 and 2021, she was a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and worked on the global investigations FinCEN Files and the Pandora Papers. In 2022 she was a Rainforest Investigations Fellow at the Pulitzer Center. Together with a colleague from InfoCongo, she has investigated the illegal timber trade in Cameroon.
Andres Bermudes Lievano
Andrés Bermúdez Liévano is a Colombian journalist who works at the Latin American Center for Investigative Journalism (CLIP) and whose reporting has focused on environmental issues, drug policy, transitional justice, and how victims of Colombia's armed conflict rebuild their lives. His work includes in-depth looks at how politicians and businessmen use secrecy jurisdictions (as part of the Pandora Papers, the largest collaborative cross-border investigation to date), irregularities in how Colombia's largest carbon offset project calculates its avoided deforestation rates and violence against environmental defenders, as well as two books on Colombia's 2016 peace agreement. Born in Bogota, he received his bachelor’s in literature at Los Andes University and master’s in journalism from Columbia University and Sciences Po Paris. He has been a grantee of the Pulitzer Center's Rainforest Journalism Fund.