RJI Fellows stories
What radio amateurs and journalists have in common during natural disasters
Fact-checking, fighting misinformation, and spreading key information in the aftermath of a disaster.
The Importance of context, data, and expert sources in discussing Latino communities
And the proliferation of disinformation in these spaces.
How investing in work culture will protect journalism’s most valuable resource: people
News breaks, but it doesn’t have to break our journalists. Our industry is not sustainable if we don’t take care of one of our most valuable resources: our people.
A sensitivity editor takes on my tweets
What it looks like when a small newsroom tries a little harder.
When the Internet and the power are out, newsrooms might need a ‘hamd’
How can journalists report when there’s no power, electricity, reception? Radio amateurs come in handy.
What do you need in your local news go bag?
Preparing for reporting when disaster and emergencies happen at home.
Rebuilding local sports journalism by partnering with community members
The hidden cost of the pandemic on small local news outlets.
How a pop-up community newsroom shed light on wildfire health impacts in Boulder, Colorado
We’re building a guide to help newsrooms fill voids in deep-dive reporting with their communities.
The argument for sensitivity readers
Equity cannot be achieved through staffing alone Some years ago my news organization began employing sensitivity readers in our work. We didn’t call it that at the time. The broad imperative of these sensitivity professionals was to help ensure that a story did not in any way harm or further marginalize identity communities featured in … Continued
How the Global Press Style Guide came to be
And the plugin we are building to make it more accessible to journalists.