Verità nell'era della crisi climatica: il ruolo cruciale del giornalismo nell'esporre la disinformazione climatica
Gio 18 aprile 2024
14:00 - 14:50
Gratuito
Calcolo distanza...
This panel discussion will focus on climate misinformation and will feature journalists reporting from Latin America, Africa, the U.S. and Asia. Journalists play a crucial role in identifying climate misinformation, which has the potential to mislead the public, hinder effective policy-making and impede efforts to address climate change. During the panel, the journalists will discuss how climate misinformation is created, amplified, and spread; they will also reveal the industries and organizations involved in spreading misinformation, and share their techniques and strategies for tracking and reporting on climate misinformation.
Sponsored by Pulitzer Center and Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Hotel Brufani
Dal 1884 il Sina Brufani è l'unico hotel 5 stelle lusso che domina il centro storico di Perugia con la sua vista panoramica sulle verdi valli dell'Umbria.
Ugochi Anyaka-Oluigbo
Ugochi Anyaka-Oluigbo is a multi-media environmental journalist and international storyteller who has visited rugged terrains to share underrepresented stories. She has covered erosions, flooding and desertification in Nigeria; oil pollution in Ogoniland of the Niger Delta, depleting Africa’s last rain forests; and frozen Lapland in Finland. She created, produced and presented over 100 episodes of Nigeria’s most popular environmental TV show, Green Angle, and worked with global organizations including BBC World Service, Duke University’s Center for Documentary Studies, The New Internationalist, Drilled Media, Orato World, Impacthub Basel, Switzerland, and more. She served as a guest lecturer at the University of Parma, Italy where she taught environmental reporting and international broadcast journalism. Her stories have earned her several local and international journalism awards including the United Nations Young Environmental Journalist Award; UNDP Nigeria recognition award; Gree...
Florencia Ballarino
Florencia Ballarino is a science journalist and senior editor at Chequeado, the first organization dedicated to fact-checking in Argentina and Latin America. She is also the vice president of the Argentine Network of Science Journalism and is a member of the board of directors of the Argentine Society of Vaccinology and Epidemiology. In 2010, she received the VI Latin American Health Journalism Award, organized by the Health Network, PAHO, and the New Ibero-American Journalism Foundation. In 2020 she was honored with the University of Buenos Aires (UBA) Award for Educational Content Dissemination in National Media for her coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Steve Sapienza
Steve Sapienza is an award-winning news and documentary producer who has covered a wide range of human security stories in dozens of countries, including the HIV crisis in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, child soldiers in Sierra Leone, climate refugees in Bangladesh, and landmine survivors in Cambodia. For over 20 years he has shot and produced stories for broadcast television and online distribution. His stories have been broadcast or published by outlets like the PBS NewsHour, The New York Times, The Financial Times, NPR, and Al Jazeera. He was chief cinematographer for Easy Like Water, an independent documentary feature about climate change in Bangladesh, which won a 2013 CINE Golden Eagle. In 2009, he earned a National News & Documentary Emmy for his work on LiveHopeLove.com, a ground-breaking multimedia project focusing on the human face of HIV/AIDS in Jamaica. In 2002, he produced Deadlock: Russia's Forgotten War for CNN Presents, winner of a CINE Golden Eagle. Most recentl...
Amy Westervelt
Amy Westervelt is an award-winning investigative climate journalist who has been on the climate beat for more than 20 years, reporting for a wide range of outlets, including Inside Climate News, The Washington Post, The Guardian, The Intercept, NPR, and many more. In 2017, she started the podcast production company Critical Frequency, which launched the first "true-crime" climate podcast, Drilled, in 2018. Today, Drilled has expanded into a multimedia investigative newsroom focused on climate accountability, and Critical Frequency has produced more than two dozen narrative, reported podcasts on subjects ranging from Indigenous rights to climate litigation. In 2023, Amy was named a Covering Climate Now’s Journalist of the Year. Her work has previously received Murrow, ONA, SEJ, Rachel Carson, and Folio awards, as well as a Peabody nomination. She is based in Costa Rica.