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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Nieman Foundation Names 12 International Fellows
Twelve international journalists have been named Nieman Fellows for
the 1999-00 academic year. They will join 12 American journalists whose
names were announced earlier in May to make up the 62nd class of
Nieman Fellows.
Established in 1938, the Nieman Fellowship program is the oldest mid-
career fellowship program for journalists in the world. The fellowships are
awarded to working journalists of particular accomplishment and promise
for an academic year of study in any part of Harvard. More than 1,000
journalists from the United States and from 69 other countries have
participated in the program.
The international journalists in the new Nieman class and their areas of
interest are:
Mark Chavunduka, editor, The Standard, Harare,
Zimbabwe; comparative study of the media in the developed world and in
developing countries. Ruth Cowan Nash Fellow; funding provided by the
Nash Fund.
Dennis Cruywagen, deputy editor, Pretoria News, South
Africa; democracies, young and old. Funding provided by the United
States-South Africa Leadership Development Program.
Nikola Djuric, owner and manager of the banned City Radio
station, Nis, Serbia; U.S. management techniques and the electronic media.
Ruth Cowan Nash Fellow; funding provided by the Nash Fund.
Ragip Duran, correspondent, based in Istanbul, Turkey,
Libération of Paris; media criticism and civic journalism. Partial
funding provided by the Central Eurasia Project of the Open Society
Institute.
Benjamin Fernandez, head of the news department, SNT
Continental‹Canal 9, Asuncion, Paraguay; moral values in the political
process from dictatorship to democracy, media business management and
regional political agreements. Knight Latin American Fellow; funding
provided by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
Aytul Gurtas, correspondent, based in Ankara, Turkey, ANSA
(Italian News Agency); international relations, human rights, nationalism
and ethnicity, and media studies. Partial funding provided by the Central
Eurasia Project of the Open Society Institute.
Andreas Harsono, freelance journalist, Jakarta, Indonesia;
government, economics, human rights and national security issues.
Funding provided by The Ford Foundation.
Tatsuya Inose, documentary program director, NHK (Japan
Broadcasting Corporation), Tokyo; U.S. economic recovery, development of
start-up companies and industrial competitiveness. Funding provided by
NHK.
Mojgan Jalali, editor, Iran News, Tehran; American and
English literature, politics and journalism. Partial funding provided by the
Central Eurasia Project of the Open Society Institute.
Rakesh Kalshian, correspondent, Outlook, New Delhi,
India. Geopolitical debate over climate change, technological solutions to
global warming and the economic consequences. Environmental Fellow;
funding provided by the V. Kann Rasmussen Foundation.
Lee Kwangchool, deputy editor and anchorman, KBS (Korean
Broadcasting System) Evening News, Seoul; business competition, customer
service, the environment and human values. Funding provided by The
Asia Foundation and The Sungkok Journalism Foundation.
Laura Lynch, national reporter, CBC (Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation) Radio, Vancouver, British Columbia; how human rights and
written constitutions shape society; decision-making, ethics and economics.
Martin Wise Goodman Canadian Nieman Fellow; funding provided by the
Goodman Trust in Canada and the Goodman Fund in the U.S.
Copyright
1999 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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