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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.

01

    Elizabeth Neuffer

Growing up in a house beside an apple orchard in the United States of the 1960’s and 1970’s, she spent many afternoons reading of faraway lands and yearning to embrace the world in all its variety.

After her happy childhood, Elizabeth confronted losses beyond her control. They sparked a determination to give voice to those around the world whose suffering attracted little attention.

"We owe it to our sources to tell their stories," she said repeatedly, as she sought out the ordinary people that many journalists never met.

Her 13-year career as a foreign correspondent for The Boston Globe gave her a unique vantage point on the world's most powerful events.

She drove through burning oil fields to be one of the first American reporters to witness the uprising of post-Gulf War Iraq in 1991. She was in Moscow that frigid winter for the collapse of the Soviet Union. Soon after, she took the helm of the Globe's European bureau in newly unified Berlin.

Her coverage of the Balkan wars of the 1990's was vivid and intense. And when a tentative peace finally came to Bosnia, she risked her life to track down those responsible for genocide as they returned to civilian life. Her dispatches, sent to members of Congress by human rights groups, helped persuade the U.S. government to make the arrest and prosecution of war criminals a top priority.

Later, Elizabeth journeyed into the hills of Rwanda to find the women whose anonymous testimonies had led to the first-ever conviction for rape as a war crime. She brought the women's personal stories to the world.

Her reporting from Bosnia and Rwanda earned her a Courage in Journalism Award from the International Women’s Media Foundation in 1998.

Traveling through Kuwait, Jordan, Iran and Iraq in the months leading up to the Iraq War, she explained why Iraqis who hated Saddam Hussein did not want a U.S. invasion.

Elizabeth died in May 2003 at the age of 46, when a car she was riding in spun out of control on a highway near Baghdad. She spent her last night amid religious pilgrims in the ancient city of Samarra.

Mourned by thousands of friends, journalists, teachers, students, soldiers and families whose lives she touched around the world, Elizabeth left a legacy of love and compassion. Her belief in the transformative power of international travel and study has inspired others to follow in her footsteps.

"She articulated ideas essential to a secure future," said former U.S. ambassador Swanee Hunt, a friend and promoter of Elizabeth's acclaimed book, The Key to My Neighbor's House: Searching for Justice in Bosnia and Rwanda.

Wrote her friend Anna Deavere Smith, " Elizabeth was a friend of the world, a friend to life itself."

The Elizabeth Neuffer IWMF Fund is generously supported by The Boston Globe, Peter Canellos, Carolyn Lee, MIT Center for International Studies, Mark Neuffer, the United Nations Foundation and Friends of Elizabeth Neuffer.

Questions

Contact us at neuffer@iwmf.org.

Comments

anamika pradhan
Sunday, May 10, 2009 3:21 AM
reading about her has really touched me.everyone cannot be like her. For women to come out they need to get opportunity and exposure.
Bishnu K Sharma
Wednesday, December 16, 2009 12:03 PM
Elizabeth is really very great woman, who worked for world's betterment. And she sacrifice her life in field. Reading about her has making me emotional and touchable. I very much agree with her principle.
Ama Sika Baako
Tuesday, February 23, 2010 5:53 AM
i agree with anamika's comment, especially in Africa women are not given such opportuniies to come out with brillant ideas and works like Elizabeth. i really admire her.
Joyce Austen Onyekuru
Tuesday, February 23, 2010 9:06 AM
Elizabeth Neuffer was my kind of woman.She was courageous and darring.A quality many journalists should possess.Her story is a lesson to us as journalists to put the interests of others first before ours and that way we could effect possitively the lives of others in our society.Her life and work are inspirations to me as a journalist.
Abdelmajid Chafik
Friday, March 05, 2010 9:00 AM
I think it's very important to find peoples, whose loving life,working for peace,and sacrifice theire life for others,Elizabith is really a great woman.
Martina Eteng
Wednesday, March 10, 2010 1:56 AM
Life's value is not in its length, Elizabeth has stregnthened that saying again. Other women must accept the reality that opportunities are never ready-made. You create them and sieze the one you recognize.
Sumi Khan
Thursday, October 28, 2010 8:22 AM
Lifetime is not Unlimited, So if we love our lives we should sacrifice with dedication, commitment and work for the people, for the society and for Peace. My Red Salute to the Courageous and Darring Brilliant Journalist Elizabeth Neuffer who sacrificed her life for Peace .

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