Category Archives: Research

        
 
 
 
 

Knight Center director speaks at Yale about cyber-dissent

Knight Center Director Eric Freedman

Knight Center Director Eric Freedman recently spoke about cyber dissent at Yale Law School’s Center for Global Legal Challenges.


Knight Center director Eric Freedman recently spoke at Yale Law School’s Center for Global Legal Challenges.
His talk, “Suppressing Cyber-dissent and the Limits of Human Rights Activism,” addressed how new communications technologies provide tools for almost anyone to become a publisher or broadcaster to disseminate news, information and opinion – even politically dangerous news , information and opinion. Those technologies also provide tools for authoritarian regimes to identify and punish cyber-dissenters.
He said experiences in the former Soviet Union, China, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere demonstrate the limited impact of efforts by human rights and free expression NGOs to effectively protest or reverse regime measures to silence cyber-critics, raising serious questions about how to increase their effectiveness.
The guest lecture was part of the Foreign Affairs in the Internet Age series organized by the Yale Law School Information Society Project.

Knight Center director’s book on environmental crises in Central Asia released

bookEnvironmental Crises in Central Asia: From Steppes to Seas, from Deserts to Glaciers has just been published by Routledge as part of its Studies in Environmental Communication and Media series.

The editors are Knight Center director Eric Freedman and Mark Neuzil, a journalism professor at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota and a past guest speaker at the Knight Center.
The book explores an array of environmental challenges in a strategically crucial part of the globe, including the impact of climate change on glacial melt, desertification, deforestation, destruction of biodiversity, hazardous wastes, water quality and supply, energy exploration, air and pesticide pollution, and environmental diseases.
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MSU alum and environmental researcher connects with Knight Center

Knight Center students listen live to a Nature reporter interviewing a scientist at the Electric Power Research Institute over the phone. The encounter was arranged by Clay Perry, EPRI's senior manager of media relations at far right. Next to him is Eric Bauman, an MSU alum and  EPRI environmental technical adviser. Standing is Chris Mahoney, the environmental marketing and communication leader at EPRI. Image: David Poulson

Knight Center students listen live to a Nature reporter interviewing a scientist at the Electric Power Research Institute over the phone. The encounter was arranged by Clay Perry, EPRI’s senior manager of media relations sitting at the far right. Next to him is Eric Bauman, an MSU alum and EPRI’s environmental technical adviser. Standing is Chris Mahoney, the company’s environmental marketing and communication leader. Image: David Poulson


By Amanda Proscia
MSU geography alum Eric Bauman (BA 1972, MA 1976) recently visited the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism to discuss his career in energy and environmental, health and safety planning.
Bauman is an environmental technical adviser for the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), a nonprofit organization in Palo Alto, California, that researches electric power-related issues.
Spending a large chunk of his childhood in the Michigan outdoors heavily influenced his career path, he said.
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Knight Center doctoral students present water research

Kristen Lynch and Tony Van Witsen discuss their water research with Jinhua Zhao, director of MSU's Environmental Science and Policy Program.

Kristen Lynch and Tony Van Witsen discuss their water research with Jinhua Zhao, left, director of MSU’s Environmental Science and Policy Program.


Two Knight Center-affiliated doctoral students in the Media and Information program presented their research at Michigan State University’s recent Environmental Science and Policy Program (ESPP) Research Symposium.
And one received a top score, earning researcher Kristen Lynch a $500 prize.
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