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International Reporting Project | Overview

Click here to go to the International Reporting Project Web site.

The International Reporting Project is designed to educate U.S. journalists about global issues and to increase and improve the coverage of international topics in the U.S. news media. It does so through a variety of fellowships, conferences, seminars, fact-finding visits and publications to meet the needs of all levels of journalists: early-career, mid-career and senior journalists.

The Program is based in Washington, D.C. at The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) of The Johns Hopkins University. Journalists involved in the International Reporting Project have access to some of the world's leading specialists in international issues at SAIS and other institutions.

The core of the Program is the “IRP Fellowships in International Journalism,” which each fall brings a group of U.S. journalists to Washington to prepare for an international reporting trip. Since the Program's founding in 1998, more than 145 IRP Fellows in International Journalism have participated in the fellowship program that includes a five-week overseas reporting project. Fellows cover stories on topics including international health and medical issues, the world of Islam, refugees and migration issues, women's and children's rights, press freedom, cultural and social change, human rights, economic development and post-conflict resolution. Stories by IRP Fellows have won major awards, and have appeared in many of the country's best news media.

Also offered by the Program are the "Gatekeeper Editors" fellowships for editors whose jobs require them to determine what gets on the air or online or in print at their news organizations. Each year, two groups of gatekeeper editors are selected to visit an important country in the news.

The "Journalist-in-Residence" fellowship enables senior journalists, in many cases veteran foreign correspondents, to spend from one to eight months in Washington to work on a book or other project about international affairs.

The Program also organizes occasional conferences and public events on international news coverage.

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 Tuesday, September 23:  

"The Future for European Union-United States Economic and Political Relations"
5 p.m. - Rome Building Auditorium

 More information

Thursday, September 25:
"Meltdown: The Inside Story of the North Korean Nuclear Crisis"
6 p.m. - Rome Building Auditorium
  More information
All upcoming events