Proteggere le vittime: lezioni apprese dalla copertura della tratta di esseri umani

Proteggere le vittime: lezioni apprese dalla copertura della tratta di esseri umani


Data

Gio 18 aprile 2024

Orari

16:00 - 16:50

Ingresso

Gratuito

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Thousands of kilometres from home, exploited and unprotected, victims of human trafficking have gone through countless horrors. Without careful planning, journalists wanting to tell their stories can re-victimise those already traumatised or potentially put them in serious danger. So, how do you put people at the centre of reporting while safeguarding sources? In this session, we’ll hear from four journalists who have investigated human trafficking across Europe.
You will come away from this session with improved knowledge of how to approach victims of human trafficking as well as other traumatic crimes. This will not only improve the outcomes and impact of your reporting but protect those who are most important and most vulnerable - your sources.


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Pagine coinvolte
Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi
Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi

Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi

Maria Delaney
Maria Delaney

Maria Delaney is the editor of Noteworthy, an Irish crowdfunded investigative platform. As an investigative journalist, she specialises in social justice, health, data and science. She is the only two-time recipient of the Journalism Excellence Award from the Irish Red Cross Humanitarian Awards and has won a number of other prestigious Irish and international awards for her work. Her reporting has sparked policy change and reaction from politicians, including from Ireland's head of government. Noteworthy supports independent and impactful public interest journalism, allowing in-depth analysis of underreported issues. It is part of The Journal, Ireland's largest native online news outlet, and a member of the European Data Journalism Network (EDJNet).

Ismail Einashe
Ismail Einashe

Ismail Einashe is an award-winning journalist and writer. He has written for The Guardian, BBC News, The Sunday Times, Foreign Policy, El Mundo, Internazionale, ArtReview, Frieze and The Nation, among many others. He is the author of the book Strangers by Tate Publishing, which explores migration through the lens of art. He co-edited the volume Lost in Media: Migrant Perspectives and the Public Sphere, a collection of essays on the representations of migrants and refugees in the European media. He is a member of Lost in Europe, a cross-border journalism project that investigates the disappearance of child migrants in Europe. In 2021, he won the inaugural Investigative Journalism for Europe (IJ4EU) Impact Award as part of the Lost in Europe team. In 2019, he won a Migration Media Award, and in 2020, he was shortlisted for the European Press Prize. In 2019, he won the Alicia Patterson Foundation Fellowship, America’s oldest journalism fellowship, for his year-long project examining C...

Sasa Lekovic
Sasa Lekovic

Sasa Lekovic is the President of NGO Investigative Journalism Center, based in Croatia. From 2015 to 2018 he was a president of the Croatian Journalists Association. He is freelance reporter, editor, trainer and media consultant from 2003 and Nacional weekly Assistant Editor-in-chief as well from 2024. Lekovic has been a journalist for the past 44 years, working in different position in local and national print media in Croatia. He is one of the founders of a Zagreb-based national daily Jutarnji list. He also has expertise in radio, TV and web media in Croatia as well in South East Europe region. As a reporter and editor as well as a licensed investigative reporting trainer and lecturer he has worked with a few hundred of journalists and journalism students, mostly in South East Europe but also in other European countries as well as and in Armenia, Bangladesh, Israel/ Palestine, Nigeria. Sasa Lekovic is one of the founders of Global Investigative Journalism Network.

Geesje van Haren
Geesje van Haren

Geesje van Haren has run her own media organization VersPers for over 20 years. Geesje is the driving force of the Lost in Europe project and leads a growing team of journalists in Europe. She coordinates the research on the ground, brings the team together, works in the field and is responsible for fundraising. Geesje also has extensive experience as a media producer in the Netherlands and she teaches investigative journalism, entrepreneurship and photography. She is also founder of the private school for investigative journalism Open Eyes Amsterdam and deputy editor-in-chief at The Investigative Desk.

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