The environment is THE beat of the 21st century

Christy George

Christy George

By Jack Nissen
Environmental journalism is known by some reporters as the “bummer beat” and “the journalism of despair.”
For Christy George, it’s going to be the “story of the 21st century.”

“It already is,” said George, a public radio and television producer from Portland, Oregon. “People just aren’t reading it yet. Climate change and extinction and things like that are really critical environmental issues that are about to overtake us and become the number one story.” Continue reading

Do we trust the press?

Eric Freedman

Eric Freedman


In an era of “fake news” finger-pointing and the continuing proliferation of blogs, social media, hacking, disinformation and economic distress in the traditional – legacy – news industry, what do Americans think about their press?
Knight Center director Eric Freedman writes about that and related questions in a Domemagazine.com column that draws from a new Gallup/Knight Foundation survey, “American Views: Trust, Media and Democracy.”
Here are two of the troubling findings from the survey, as Freedman writes in “Too Much Information? Not Enough Trust.”

  • Half of those surveyed – down from 68 percent a generation ago – expressed confidence that they’ve got enough sources of information to separate facts from bias in news reports.
  • Two-thirds asserted that most news media “do not do a good job of separating fact from opinion.”

The column concludes: “While the citizenry believe the news media still have an essential role in our democratic society, the press must strive to convince them that it’s fulfilling that responsibility.”

Knight Center-affiliated research assistant awarded conservation and environmental leadership fellowship

 Apoorva Joshi

Apoorva Joshi

Doctoral student and Knight Center-affiliated research assistant, Apoorva Joshi, was awarded the annual Theodore Roosevelt Conservation and Environmental Leadership Fellowship by Michigan State University this month.

The fellowship, announced by MSU’s Graduate School, aims to provide graduate or professional students the support to pursue opportunities for gaining leadership experience in environment or conservation-based professions or programs. Recipients are required to have exhibited an interest in leadership and in local and global environmental and conservation issues.

As a 2016 recipient of the Environmental Science and Policy Program’s Doctoral Recruiting Fellowship at MSU, Joshi has consistently demonstrated an active interest in environmental issues including wildlife conservation, human-wildlife conflict resolution, and environmental communication. Her interests and current work as a PhD student with the School of Journalism is concerned with better understanding these complex contemporary environmental issues which often transcend disciplinary confines.

The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation and Environmental Leadership Fellowship, as described by the Graduate School, not only encourages such interdisciplinary approaches to studying environmental issues, but also urges students working in this sphere to seek and gain valuable leadership experience in “effective and efficient management, protection and conservation of natural resources.”

Joshi is presently a second-year doctoral student in the Information and Media program, and is pursuing a dual major in environmental science and policy and a graduate certificate in conservation criminology.

Interested in environmental and risk communication, international environmental crime and policy, and environmental attitudes and behaviors, Joshi came to Michigan State University in the fall of 2016 after working for two years as an environmental correspondent for online news site, Mongabay.com. She received her Master’s degree in environmental journalism in 2013 from the University of Montana, Missoula, and her Bachelor’s degree in environmental science from the University of Pune in Pune, India, where she is originally from.

With the support she has received through the Theodore Roosevelt Fellowship, Joshi hopes to undertake internships with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), and the Freeland Foundation. These internships will provide hands-on professional leadership experience in learning how international wildlife crime is dealt with in both developing and developed regions of the world by large multi-function organizations like the UN and by organizations like Freeland which focus specifically on wildlife and human trafficking.

Considering the far-reaching impact of communication in increasingly global environmental issues that span multiple cultures, nations, languages and policies, these internships will add a valuable real-world perspective to the interdisciplinary research Joshi will be conducting during her time at MSU. Eventually, she hopes, the academic and practical aspects of contemporary environmental challenges can be address in unison instead of being considered independently, and to that end, this fellowship will help her fulfil her motto of ‘conservation through communication.’

Knight Center grad recognized as young environmental leader

Haley Walker

Haley Walker

Knight Center alum Haley Walker recently joined the  Oregon Environmental Council‘s Emerging Leaders Board.

The council’s advisory board of “entrepreneurs, strategist, community leaders and visionaries under the age of 40 have agreed to share their extraordinary skills to support the mission of Oregon Environmental Council.”

Walker, who graduated from the Knight Center in December of 2010, is the senior communications director with The Freshwater Trust, the oldest wild fish conservation group in the Pacific Northwest.

While at MSU she wrote for the Knight Center’s award-winning EJ Magazine and was an early reporter for the center’s Great Lakes Echo environmental news service. The stories she covered for those publications were as diverse as climate change in national parks and gardens maintained by prison inmates and confessing to spending half her income on organic food.

As a student she was part of an award-winning team recognized by the Society of Professional Journalists for a series of stories about water quality problems at public pools. The Knight Center awarded her the Edward J. Meeman Service Award in 2010.