CEJ in Focus
- The Center for Environmental Journalism hosted three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter Eric Lipton for its second annual Ackland Lecture in Journalism on Oct. 22.Lipton’s lecture centered around his efforts to bring more
- [video:https://youtu.be/wlsM_QDcvT0] The inaugural exhibition of the University of Colorado’s NEST Studio for the Arts opens on Friday, September 21.NEST, which stands for Nature, Environment, Science, and Technology, Studio for the Arts is an
- Five award-winning journalists have been named as the 2018-19 class of Ted Scripps Fellows in Environmental Journalism at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ.The new fellows include a CNN producer and nationally-known book authors and
- In September the Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s Center for Environmental Journalism welcomed an inaugural group of Scholars in Residence. This new program hosts working journalists, who serve as ambassadors for two years at the Center for
- Five former Ted Scripps Fellows—David Baron, Scott Carney, Erin Espelie, Michael Kodas and Hannah Nordhaus—sat down together at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ campus on Feb. 1, 2018 to discuss the whys and hows of nonfiction book writing at the
- Over the past several months, a series of massively destructive wildfires have ravaged the country. In light of these events, media outlets have turned to the expertise of Michael Kodas.
- From the fall 2017 issue of CMCI Now: CU and Norwegian participants in the Arctic Lenses climate journalism project navigate a glacier in the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard. Read story at CMCI Now
- The Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s Center for Environmental Journalism celebrates its 25th anniversary this month, as well as the 20th anniversary of the Ted Scripps Environmental Journalism Fellowship. The center, established in 1992,
- Amy Martin, one of five journalists selected for the Ted Scripps Fellowship in Environmental Journalism this year, launched her new podcast, Threshold, earlier this month.The podcast explores stories from the natural world, with the first season
- Jonny Waldman won the 2016 Colorado Book Award in the general nonfiction category for his book Rust: The Longest War. In 2010, the Ted Scripps Fellowship at CU-Boulder’s Center for Environmental Journalism (CEJ) gave Waldman an opportunity to develop his idea further.