Subramaniam Vincent receives John S Knight fellowship for journalism innovation

Every year the Knight fellowships program at Stanford University awards eight international fellowships for journalism innovation. This year, one of the eight is your own newsmagazine’s co-founder.

Citizen Matters and India Together co-founder Subramaniam (Subbu) Vincent has won the John S Knight (JSK) Journalism Fellowship at Stanford University for 2015-16.

He is one among eight awardees who have been awarded the fellowship to pursue proposals for journalism innovation at Stanford University during the 2015-16 academic year. The other fellows are from Ukraine, Venezuela, Kenya, Germany, China, Australia, and Brazil.

“I am thrilled and excited by receiving this award,” says Subramaniam Vincent. Explaining the project on which he will work on during the fellowship, he says: “Around the world, city newsrooms are often using reporters to both track city issues and civic engagement as well as report on it. This is not efficient, because tracking needs to happen all the time even when reporting is not going on. Otherwise newsrooms go out of sync very quickly when they are short of staff or when reporters change roles, etc. And the best of technologies and design are available today. I want to find a way to help newsrooms track issues better and seamlessly.”

Reproduced below, with permission, is the full news posting released by the JSK program at Stanford University on April 20th.

International JSK Journalism Fellows named for 2015-16

Oleksandr Akymenko, Nathalie Alvaray, Arif Elsaui, Ling Huawei, Astrid Maier, Jacqueline Park, Daniela Pinheiro, Subramaniam Vincent Pics: JSK Fellowships, Stanford University.

Eight international journalists have been awarded John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships to pursue proposals for journalism innovation at Stanford during the 2015-16 academic year.

They will develop a range of proposals for meeting journalism’s challenges. These include engaging the emerging middle class in Australia, new business models to sustain independent media, encouraging innovation in media, supporting media working under adverse political and economic conditions and leveraging technology to empower women to lead in newsrooms.

“We’re really excited about this group of international fellows,” said JSK Director James Bettinger. “We think they’re going to have a major impact on journalism in their home countries.”

The JSK program fosters journalistic innovation, entrepreneurship and leadership. Each year, it gives 20 outstanding individuals from around the world the resources to pursue and test their ideas for improving the quality of news and information reaching the public. Twelve U.S. fellows will be announced in late April.

The international fellows selected were among 436 applicants from 88 countries. The JSK Fellowships directors made the final selections with additional research by the International Center for Journalists. Financial support for international fellows comes from sources that

include the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Lyle and Corrine Nelson International Journalism Fund, the Enlight Foundation and Yahoo! Inc. The 2015-16 academic term will be the 50th year of journalism fellowships at Stanford.

The 2015-16 International John S. Knight Journalism Fellows

Oleksandr Akymenko, publisher, platfor.ma, Kyiv, Ukraine (Lyle and Corrine Nelson International Fellow)

Journalism challenge: How can we implement new business models to sustain independent media in developing markets?

Nathalie Alvaray, director of content, runrun.es, Caracas, Venezuela (Yahoo! International Fellow)

Journalism challenge: How can we develop a journalist-centered innovation model to promote entrepreneurship and sustainable new media under adverse political and economic conditions?

Arif Elsaui, East African correspondent, Anadolu News Agency, Nairobi, Kenya

Journalism challenge: How can professional journalism be conducted in regimes with deterrent political, security and socio-economic conditions?

Ling Huawei, managing editor, Caixin Weekly, Beijing China (Enlight Foundation Fellow)

Journalism challenge: How can we structure news organizations to support continual innovation and restore the influence of professional media in the Internet Age?

Astrid Maier, chief technology correspondent, manager magazin, Hamburg, Germany

Journalism challenge: How can we use technology to empower women in newsrooms to take on leadership positions?

Jacqueline Park, executive director, The Walkley Foundation, Sydney, Australia

Journalism challenge: How can we create a program specifically tailored to journalists and media in Australia to encourage investment in new media and embed innovation in journalism?

Daniela Pinheiro, senior reporter, Revista Piauí, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Knight Foundation Latin American Fellow)

Journalism challenge: How can digital media engage Brazil’s emerging middle class with the news?

Subramaniam Vincent, managing director/editor-in-chief, Oorvani Media, Bangalore, India

Journalism challenge: How can city newsrooms systematically track and capture data from complex issues independent of reporters’ efforts?

 

Related Articles

Citizen Matters wins best e-news media award
Citizen Matters wins Namma Bengaluru Award
What another award for Citizen Matters means to me
Vaishnavi Vittal wins Laadli award for Citizen Matters article
Citizen Matters wins Manthan award in E-news and Journalism category for South Asia

Comments:

  1. Sriram Narayanaswamy says:

    A well deserved recognition. Congratulations.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Nam Kudiyiruppu Nam Poruppu: Is the scheme doing more harm than good in Chennai?

RWA members within the community, chosen to implement the scheme in resettlement sites in Chennai, feel alienated from other residents.

In December 2021, the Tamil Nadu government introduced the Nam Kudiyiruppu Nam Poruppu scheme for residents living in low-income, government housing and resettlement sites managed by the Tamil Nadu Urban Habitat Development Board (TNUHDB). In this scheme, residents form associations to oversee the maintenance of these sites, with the intention of transferring ownership of their living spaces back to them. This move is significant, especially for the resettlement sites, considering the minimal consultation and abrupt evictions relocated families have faced during the process. What the scheme entails The scheme also aims to improve the quality of living in these sites.…

Similar Story

It’s a struggle: Away from family, migrant workers from Murshidabad face unending challenges

With a lack of opportunities in their State and little help from the Government, guest workers dream of a better future in faraway places.

Murshidabad was once the capital of Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa and was known as the abode of Nawabs. But the present reality is different — one of the minority-dominated districts of West Bengal, it is now labelled ‘backward.’ The district does not even have a full-fledged university.  The district lags in socio-economic terms due to the lack of employment opportunities. One part of Murshidabad relies on agriculture, while the other depends on migrant labour. Consequently, many workers in the district are forced to migrate to other States for sustenance. Murshidabad has the highest percentage of workers from Bengal, who are…