News

Columbia Journalism School in partnership with the Pulitzer Center is proud to announce the graduates from the Class of 2024 who have been selected for fellowships to pursue in-depth projects on underreported issues of global importance.

As one of three winners, Foust will focus on underreported communities and the juvenile correctional system as a fellow at The Maine Monitor.

Columbia Journalism Graduates Receive Industry Promotions and Take Home Top Awards.

As a collaboration between Columbia Journalism School and Stanford University’s School of Engineering, the Brown Institute for Media Innovation awards its “Magic Grants” to projects that work between the two disciplines, creating new forms of media and new ways to serve the public interest.

The grants will support yearlong reporting projects and will cover costs for data acquisition, analysis, and visualization, additional staff, FOIA requests, travel or other reporting needs.

One year ago, Dean Jelani Cobb and Columbia Journalism School launched the pilot Loan Repayment Assistance Program, the first of its kind for graduate journalism schools.

The board of the Maria Moors Cabot Prize condemns the criminalization of independent journalism in Latin America.

Jelani Cobb, the dean of Columbia Journalism School, Peabody Award–winning filmmaker, and longtime staff writer at the New Yorker, discusses the complexities of journalism in 2024.  

Nineteen members of the Columbia Journalism School community have been named finalists and winners of the Pulitzer Prizes.

On World Press Freedom Day, CJS supports Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and calls for his release.

"I'm so proud to be in the company of all these great minds, artists, writers, thinkers whose work I've admired for years,” said Alarcón.

Students at CJS have the opportunity and the challenge of engaging with news outlets directly to share their stories with the world as they unfold.

Columbia Journalism School announced today 10 Knight-Bagehot Fellows in Economics and Business Journalism for the 2024-2025 academic year.

Reporters from The Washington Post and the Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism at WHRO & ProPublica have won the 2024 Berger Award and Tobenkin Award, respectively.

The Lipman Center for Journalism and Civil and Human Rights is proud to announce its 2024 fellowship winners — journalists who will pursue reporting projects on issues of inequity and human or civil rights abuses.