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Cultivating Leadership
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Courage in Journalism Awards

Every year the International Women’s Media Foundation honors brave women journalists who risk political persecution,injury and sometimes death in their efforts to expose corruption and champion human rights.

Global Research on Women

The IWMF is working on ground-breaking research on the status of women in the media worldwide. The new study, the Global Report on the Status of Women in the News Media, will measure the career progress of women in the news media and use the results to help advocate for change.

The IWMF also tracks past studies on women in the news media, and will draw from this prior work in compiling the Global Report, which will be published in 2011.

4-Year Africa Project

With generous support from the Howard G. Buffett Foundation, the IWMF launched "Reporting on Agriculture and Women: Africa." The project is energizing the way African media cover one of the most important topics on the continent.
The IWMF is helping African journalists to boost coverage of agriculture and rural development and increase women’s voices – both as journalists and as sources – in stories about agriculture

Funding HIV/AIDS Investigative Reporting

The IWMF is establishing 10 fellowships to train journalists in South Africa to write investigative reports on the HIV/AIDS epidemic. With support from the M*A*C  AIDS Fund, these experienced journalists will conduct interviews and write in-depth research for their publications in 2011.

02

    Tsering Woeser Threatened; Asks Readers to Spread News
Washington, D.C., November 2, 2010 -- 2010 Courage in Journalism Award winner Tsering Woeser has
posted an urgent post to her blog asking readers to spread news of her latest threat. She cannot get on
to her Twitter account.

Yesterday morning, Woeser, who is visiting her mother in Lhasa, received a call from the Lhasa City
Public Security Bureau “summoning” her to go to the bureau. “I said I would not go. I had no reason to
go …” she wrote in her blog, Invisible Tibet. The caller told Weser, “You know what you have done.”

Weser replied that she had “not done anything illegal,” and told the caller that the Public Security
Bureau could come and see her but they “had to follow the correct procedures.”

The caller, responded, “Yes, we will come and we will follow the correct procedures.”

Weser remains at her mother’s house where she is being watched by the Public Security Bureau.

Read the English translation of Weser’s latest blog.

Read Weser’s acceptance speech for the Courage in Journalism Awards.

Read an article about Woeser.

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