Environmental Journalism Grant Launched, Aimed at Themes of COP30
Source: Pulitzer Center
The Pulitzer Center has opened calls for applications to journalists looking to cover issues related to the environment and the climate crisis in the lead up to COP30. This editorial grant specifically "aims to support investigative projects that examine how domestic and international climate policies influence the governance of rainforest and ocean ecosystems. This includes exploring, for example, how regulations—or their absence and misuse—facilitate problematic industrial operations, unsustainable supply chains, and opaque carbon offset schemes." Submissions can be made in English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Bahasa Indonesia. The deadline to apply is February 15.
Nominations Open for 2025 UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize
Source: UNESCO
UNESCO is now accepting nominations for its annual Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize, which was established 28 years ago to recognize an individual or organization that has made an outstanding contribution to defending press freedom in the past year. Named in honor of Cano, a Colombian journalist gunned down outside his newspaper office in Bogota in 1986, the prize committee accepts submissions of up to three candidates each from member states, press-focused NGOs, and professional organizations. The deadline to apply is midnight February 14, 2025.
Rising Business Prospects, But Worries Over More Press Attacks and ‘AI Slop’: Reuters 2025 Journalism Outlook
Source: Reuters Institute
Reuters Institute has published a survey looking at expectations and predictions for the journalism industry in 2025. Ominously, it found that just 41% of media leaders are confident about the future of the press, a drop of nearly 20% from just three years earlier. This includes an expectation that referral traffic from most social media sites will continue to erode, and concern over "AI slop" infecting the information environment and undermining the work of fact-based reporting. While more than half — 56% — are optimistic about their site's business prospects for 2025, worries about further demonization of the press and physical attacks still color much of the industry, especially with the arrival of several far right governments into power around the world.
Apply for ICFJ’s Independent Video Journalism Award
Source: International Center for Journalists
The International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) is now accepting applications for its News Creator Award for Excellence in Independent Video Journalism. This honor, which will be given to eight winners at the 2025 International Journalism Festival in Perugia, Italy, recognizes high-quality, digital-first video journalism from independent reporters around the world. The deadline for nominations is midnight US EST on January 15.
Grants for Cross-Border Teams Investigating Environmental Issues in Europe
Source: Journalismfund Europe
As part of its Earth Investigations Programme, Journalismfund Europe is offering another round of grants for cross-border teams of professional journalists. The funding, which totals €1.6 million (US$ 1.7 million) for the 2025 cohort, targets investigations into the environment in Europe (not just the EU) and is not limited to media organizations in Europe (although any final story or stories must be published by at least one Europe-based site). The grant can used by journalists to fund reporting time and logistics expenses as well as cover legal costs and investments in necessary technology or datasets. Deadline: January 23, 2025.
SIRAJ Uncovers Evidence That Assad’s Syrian Intelligence Was Secretly Spying on Its Journalists
Source: LinkedIn
In the wake of the collapse of President Bashar al-Assad's regime in Syria, GIJN member SIRAJ has uncovered internal documents showing that the intelligence agencies were surveilling members of the site's staff and tracking their work. In a post on LinkedIn, SIRAJ founder Mohammad Bassiki detailed the revelations: "We now know there were a total of six former Assad's regime security branches secretly pursing us inside and outside Syria." However, this intense scrutiny, he noted, was proof of the power of accountability journalism, even when facing one of the most implacable totalitarian regimes. Bassiki promised a fuller account will be published soon on SIRAJ's site.
Georgian Journalists Attacked by Police While Covering Pro-EU Protests
Source: Committee to Protect Journalists
At least 50 journalists have been injured by police in recent weeks while covering pro-EU demonstrations in Georgia. According to the CPJ, dozens of reporters covering the mass protests in Tbilisi and elsewhere in Georgia have been brutalized or unfairly detained while doing their jobs. While Georgia's Special Investigation Service said it will be looking into these assaults on the press, CPJ decried what it called a clear pattern of intimidation. “Georgian authorities must hold police officers to account for brutalizing members of the press and publicly commit to uphold journalist safety during the protests," said the CPJ's Gulnoza Said.
Lighthouse Reports Extends Application Deadline for OSINT Workshop for Young Syrians Based in the EU
Source: Lighthouse Reports
GIJN member Lighthouse Reports is holding workshops in Berlin in January 2025 for young Syrians and Afghans living in the EU who are interested in pursuing a career in OSINT and investigative journalism. The December 4 application deadline has been extended to Wednesday, December 11 for Syrian applicants. The workshop will “combine training, practical exercises and Q&As with expert guest speakers. Trainers will cover social media investigations, analyzing satellite imagery and plane and ship tracking, amongst other topics.” The workshop is open to students, recent graduates, or young professionals already based in the Schengen Area.
European Federation of Journalists to Stop Publishing on Social Media Site X
Source: European Federation of Journalists
The EFJ announced that it will soon stop publishing content on the social media site X, formerly known as Twitter. The EFJ, which represents nearly 300,000 journalists in 44 countries, said that it will no longer update its account with content from its members as of January 20, 2025. It joins the Guardian and other European media sites that have ceased updating their X accounts, citing numerous actions by new owner Elon Musk which includes downranking news links, ending free verification, and changing its algorithm to push right-wing content. The EFJ said that it can "no longer ethically participate in a social network that its owner has transformed into a machine of disinformation and propaganda."
Applications are Open for the Kim Wall Memorial Fund
Source: IWMF
Swedish journalist Kim Wall had an accomplished career as an international correspondent, reporting from Cuba, Kampala, and Sri Lanka. When she was killed while reporting a story, her family set up a memorial fund in her name, in co-ordination with the International Women's Media Foundation.
Since 2018, the fund has awarded more than a dozen $5,000 reporting grants to women and nonbinary journalists "whose reporting carries forward Kim’s legacy."
“We can never get Kim back, but we can see to it that her spirit and will live on, and inspire other young journalists to go out in the world and find the stories," her family said. Deadline: December 8.