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Event Dates

Tuesday, November 9, 2021 2pm

Virtual Event
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Together, the National Center on Disability and Journalism (NCDJ) and Harvard Law School Project on Disability (HPOD) are organizing an event on the intersection of journalism and disability rights. Although journalists have long played vital roles in exposing disability rights violations, and still do to this day, they have also at times amplified harmful stereotypes or reflected biases about persons with disabilities. Part of the challenge in correcting disability bias in journalism stems from the chronic underrepresentation of persons with disabilities in the profession, which promising new initiatives such as the NCDJ and The New York Times’ Disability Journalism Fellowship seek to address. At the same time, many journalists are using progressive strategies to promote the inclusion of persons with disabilities in telling their own stories, such as ProPublica’s community engagement reporting on services for persons with developmental disabilities in Arizona. This panel, featuring journalists with and without disabilities, will discuss how advocates can work with journalists to promote disability rights and also the opportunities and challenges that journalists face when covering disability rights issues.

CART captioning will be provided.

Speakers:

  • Joe ShapiroNPR News Investigations correspondent
  • Rosemarie Garland-ThomsonProfessor Emerita of English and bioethics, Emory University
  • Eric GarciaSenior Washington correspondent, The Independent
  • Amanda MorrisDisability reporting fellow, The New York Times


Moderator: Kristin GilgerDirector, National Center on Disability and Journalism

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