Category Archives: Speakers

Panel: The Economic Toll from the COVID-19 pandemic – Hosted by IRE

Join IRE next week as panelists discuss the economic toll from the COVID-19 pandemic. 
You can register for the webinar here


The economic toll from the coronavirus pandemic is hard to fathom. This session will cover finding data to quantify and dig into the economic fallout, as well as finding the human stories to illustrate the staggering toll. Panelists will show how to find and use economic data from the St. Louis Fed, how to dig into WARN reports of layoffs in your state, and how to crowdsource to find human sources, especially among vulnerable populations.

Speakers include Paul Overberg of The Wall Street Journal; Keith Taylor of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; and Wendi C. Thomas of MLK50. IRE Deputy Executive Director Denise Malan will moderate the panel.
The webinar will also be recorded and posted on the IRE website for those who cannot attend live. The webinar is free and available to members and non-members of IRE.

Time: Apr 15, 2020 2 PM Eastern Time; 1 PM Central Time (US and Canada)
Register here.

INVITE: Conference – The Evolving Role of Dentist in Healthcare

We invite you to join Visiting Professor Dr. Donald Giddon, Harvard Professor Emeritus,
and faculty and students from the College of Dental Medicine for a thought provoking
discussion on how changing disease patterns and advances in technology may revolutionize the delivery of oral health care.

Register here
for all or part of the program, which includes lunch, audience participation debates and a cocktail reception.

Sessions run from 1:00 to 3:00pm, 3:20 to 5:00 pm and 5:15 to 6:00 pm (with reception to follow).


Whether or not you can attend, we would greatly appreciate if you would take just a minute to complete this
short
pre-conference survey that explores attitudes about integration of dentistry and medicine.

Responses are completely anonymous and results will be reviewed during the program. Thank you!

 

 

 

INVITE: Conference on Political Satire and Press Freedom in Latin America

Conference on Political Satire and Press Freedom in Latin America at The Cooper Union on October 15

 

What:                      Press freedom in Latin America is constantly under threat. As a result of the attacks by some politicians and organized crime, the job of a social communicator is not only increasingly difficult to do, but in some cases it could mean a one-way ticket to death. A recent study by the American Organization Freedom House reports a drastic deterioration of the conditions of Latin American journalists.

 

                                     “Bitter Laughter” a free, public conference about political satire and press freedom in Latin America will feature some of the region’s best political cartoonists as well as two keynote speakers to present the history of Latin American political satire and its current form. The conference will be in English and in Spanish, with English supertitles as needed.

 

Who:                        Cartoonists include:

 

Keynote Speakers:

  • Enrique del Risco(Cuba) — writer and academic from New York University from Cuba
  • Elisa Tótaro (Venezuela) — director and co-founder of Equipo70, a political and Institutional communications firm

 

When:                     Saturday, October 15, 2pm – 6pm

 

Where:                   The Cooper Union, Frederick P. Rose Audito

41 Cooper Square, NY, NY  10003

 

More:                      The conference, which is co-sponsored by ViceVersa Magazine, a weekly online publication showcasing the talent and achievements of Hispanics in the United States, and by the Dept. of Continuing Education and Public Programs of The Cooper Union, is free and open to the public. RSVPs are requested at http://bit.ly/2cumPcx.

INVITATION: Knight-Bagehot Fellowship Presents: Raul Gallegos

KNIGHT-BAGEHOT FELLOWSHIP PRESENTS:
Raúl Gallegos: Crude Nation
Wednesday, October 19, 20166:30 PM
Stabile Center
 
Please join us as 2016-2017 Knight-Bagehot Fellows Stephen Kurczy and Silvana Ordoñez interview former Fellow Raúl Gallegos, ’81, on his new book, “Crude Nation: How Oil Riches Ruined Venezuela.”
Crude Nation tells the story of a country addicted to oil riches. The book explores the everyday economic reality that makes Venezuela – the nation with the world’s largest oil reserves – a ticking time bomb. It brings to life an upside down world where people buy and sell U.S. dollars in secret, and smuggle gasoline and food for a living. Drivers fill their gas tanks almost for free and used cars never lose their value over time. Venezuela’s consumers assume as much debt as they can handle and, paradoxically, spend their money on breast implants and flat screen TVs to safeguard their wealth. In Venezuela, only the ignorant save money; smart people max out their credit cards whenever possible.
To reserve your spot for this event, please go to:

INVITE: Women in Media Series @ CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Closing the Gender Gap: Women in Investigative Reporting

Date & Time:

From 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM on April 14, 2016

Location:

CUNY Graduate School of Journalism, Room 308

Lisa ArmstrongLisa Armstrong

In a 2013 blog post, Sheila Coronel, director of the Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism wrote:  “A quick look at the 100 or so nonprofit investigative reporting centers, funds and associations worldwide shows that the face of watchdog journalism is male.”

Part of the problem is that investigative reporting involves digging into political corruption, crime, and things that people are often doing their best to hide, and so comes with some risk. The question is whether women journalists, who might be seen as being more physically vulnerable, are as up to the task of investigative reporting as men.

Please join us for a discussion with panelists Sarah Childress, senior digital reporter for Frontline; Esther Kaplan, editor of The Nation’s Investigative Fund; and Kendall Taggart, investigative reporter at BuzzFeed, who will talk about their own work, barriers they have faced, and ways they have overcome them.

This event is part of the “Women in Media” series sponsored by the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism’s Diversity Committee.

Admission is free but registration is required. RSVP here.

Panelists:

Sarah ChildressSarah Childress

Sarah Childress is a senior digital reporter for FRONTLINE. Previously, she covered Iraq for Newsweek and sub-Saharan Africa for The Wall Street Journal, and edited reporters in Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America for GlobalPost. Her work has also been published in The New York Times and The Washington Post.

Esther KaplanEsther Kaplan

Esther Kaplan is editor of the Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute. She has written for Harper’s, Virginia Quarterly Review, The Nation, The American Prospect, In These Times, The Village Voice, and other publications. She is the author of With God on Their Side: George W. Bush and the Christian Right (New Press), which Ms. magazine called “a frightening and necessary read.” She was a 2013 fellow with the Alicia Patterson Foundation.

Kendall TaggartKendall Taggart

Kendall Taggart is a reporter at BuzzFeed. She works on long-term, investigative projects and has written about charity scams, judges who violate the law, and environmental health issues.  Previously, she was a reporter at The Center for Investigative Reporting. While there, she worked on “America’s Worst Charities,” a project about nonprofits that claimed to support causes like aiding terminally ill children and police officers, but funneled many of the donations to themselves or for-profit fundraising companies. The project was honored with the Gold Bartlett & Steele award for investigative business journalism. @KendallTTaggart

Moderator: Lisa Armstrong, a journalist and visiting associate professor at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism. She has reported from several countries, including Ethiopia, The Philippines, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Tajikistan, and from Haiti from 2010 to 2014 through grants from The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and NYU. Her work has been published in The Atlantic, The Daily Beast, Essence, The New York Times and other outlets, and has won multiple awards, including a National Press Club award for online journalism, and a Webby, for her “Voices of Haiti” ibook, which was a compilation of the blog posts and multimedia work done with her Pulitzer Center colleagues. She currently has grants from The Investigative Fund and The Carter Center to report on juveniles who have been sentenced to life without parole.

 

EVENT: Seeking Solutions to End Sexual Violence Symposium

You’re Invited to Attend the Seeking Solutions to End Sexual Violence Symposium 2016
In honor of Sexual Assault Awareness Month, the Columbia School of Social Work Students Against Sexual Violence Caucus is hosting the Seeking Solutions to End Sexual Violence Symposium to gather students from across campus so that we can collaborate in order to secure a system that works with and for survivors of sexual violence. The main purpose of this year’s Symposium is to discuss the scope of the problem, take an intersectional approach to our work, and begin to seek solutions. We are pleased to have speakers from a variety of NYC organizations working everyday on this issue: the NYC Alliance Against Sexual Assault, Safe Horizon, Anti-Violence Project, Legal Aid, Bronx Legal Services, NYPD, Mount Sinai St. Luke’s and Roosevelt Hospitals, SAFER, New York Asian Women’s Center, GEMS, Day One, Sexual Health Innovations, and more!
WHEN: Saturday April 9, 2016 | 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM *
   *Networking Happy Hour to follow
WHERE: Columbia School of Social Work
REGISTRATION REQUIRED: http://tinyurl.com/endSV16
We look forward to seeing you there!

 

EVENT: Addressing Islamophobia

Addressing Islamophobia:
Dispelling Myths to Break Down Barriers

Monday, Feb. 15 @ 5 p.m. | Lerner Hall C555 (2920 Broadway / 115 St.)

Join us for an informative and interactive session about Islam and Islamophobia, featuring social justice educator and “hip-hop activist” Amer F. Ahmed, Ed. D.

Sponsored by the Office of University LifeMulticultural Affairs | Undergraduate Student Life, and the International Students and Scholars Office, withColumbia’s Muslim Students Association, and Turath, the Arab Students Association.

The event is free, but space is limited. To attend please register by Feb. 11 –http://bit.ly/ai215OMA. For more information visit http://bit.ly/CULisl.

@ColumbiaULife
Columbia University Life

Spring Prep Day 2016 Agenda

8:30am-9:00am – Lobby

Student Registration

 9:00am-10:00am – Lecture Hall

Covering the Transgender Story

Producers from ABC News & FRONTLINE discuss the Bruce Jenner interview and how to report on children in transition.

  • Prof Betsy West moderator
  • Miri Navasky & Karen O’Connor, Producers/Directors FRONTLINE “Growing Up Trans”
  • Margaret Dawson & Claire Weinraub, Producers ABC News “Bruce Jenner Interview”

10:00am-11:00am – Lecture Hall

Reporting on Syria’s 2013 Sarin Gas Attack 

CBS News Anchor Scott Pelley and Sr. Producer Nicole Young talk about reporting an international war crime; Syria’s President Assad use of sarin gas on civilians in 2013, and 60 Minutes’ decision to show graphic footage of the victims.

  • Prof/duPont Jury Chair Dick Wald interviewer
  • Scott Pelley, CBS News Anchor; “60 Minutes: A Crime Against Humanity”
  • Nicole Young, CBS News Sr. Producer; “60 Minutes: A Crime Against Humanity”

11:00am-12:00pm – Lecture Hall

Career Services Presentation

In this session we will present an overview of spring events and deadlines that will help you plot your post-graduation careers. Topics include: Your career search timeline, a round-up of exclusive internships that are available only to J-Schoolers (deadline Feb. 25), upcoming career-related workshops, and how to start preparing now for Career Expo 2016. This talk is aimed at students in all degree programs at the J-School. Presented by the Career Services team.

12:00pm-1:00pm

Lunch on your own

1:00pm-2:00pm – Lecture Hall

“Discrimination, Harassment, and Gender-Based Misconduct”

*Attendance will be taken at the close of this session.

2:00pm-3:00pm – Lecture Hall

Uncovering Misconduct 

Investigative reporters from WNYC in New York, KMOV-TV in Missouri, WBAL-TV in Baltimore and KCBS radio in SF speak about covering the criminal justice system and un-covering misconduct by thos”e in power.

  • Prof June Cross moderator
  • Craig Cheatham, Investigative Reporter frmr KMOV – now at KSTP: “The Injustice System: Cops, Courts & Greedy Politicians”
  • Robert Lewis, Reporter, WNYC “NYPD Bruised”
  • Jayne Miller, Investigative Reporter, WBAL, “Freddie Gray Investigation”
  • Doug Sovern, Reporter, KCBS “Unholy Water” (duPont Finalist)

3:00pm-4:00pm – Lecture Hall

International Reporting Now

Reporters and producers from VICE News, HBO Real Sports, and FRONTLINE in conversation about innovative foreign reporting – from covering the Ebola outbreak in West Africa (including using 360 video), to harnassing social media to track Russian soldiers in Ukraine, to mixing humor, sports and tragedy to tell important international stories.

  • Prof Ann Cooper moderator
  • Simon Ostrovsky, Reporter (VICE),”Selfie Soldiers”
  • David Scott, Correspondent/Producer, HBO Real Sports, “The Price of Glory”
  • Dan Edge, Sr. Producer, FRONTLINE, “Outbreak”
  • Sasha Joelle Achilli, Producer, FRONTLINE “Outbreak”