John Schidlovsky
- Trip:
- Affiliation during program:
- International Reporting Project
- Country:
- Kenya
- Email:
- jschidlovsky@jhu.edu
John Schidlovsky is the founding director of the International Reporting Project. He created the program in 1998 with the goal of encouraging more international coverage in the U.S. media. Previously he spent four years as the first director of The Freedom Forum's Asian Center in Hong Kong from 1993 to 1997, monitoring media changes in the transition of Hong Kong to Chinese rule and working with journalists in virtually every country in the Asia-Pacific region. From 1990 to 1993 he was the curator of the Jefferson Fellowships program for journalists at the East-West Center in Honolulu.
Schidlovsky was a reporter for nearly 20 years, including 13 years with The Baltimore Sun. He was The Sun's Beijing bureau chief from 1987 to the end of 1989, and closely covered the Tiananmen Square demonstrations and aftermath. Earlier he served as The Sun's New Delhi bureau chief and covered events in the Indian Subcontinent and throughout the Asia-Pacific region. Before joining The Sun in 1977, he was a freelance reporter in Cairo and Beirut, covering the region for NBC, ABC and Newsday.
Schidlovsky studied Arabic at the American University in Cairo and at Columbia University, from which he received a bachelor's degree in English in 1970. He began his career in journalism as a reporter at the Springfield (MA) Union in 1971. He was awarded a Gannett Fellowship in Asian Studies at the University of Hawaii in 1983 and was named journalist-in-residence at the East-West Center in 1989. He has written about media issues for the Media Studies Journal, Nieman Reports, IPI Reports, American Journalism Review and other publications.
Stories
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11 Gatekeeper Editors travel to Turkey
The Gatekeepers met with a wide range of Turkish leaders in fields such as politics, business, religion, media, medicine and health, education, arts and culture and other ...
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12 Gatekeeper Editors travel to Uganda
Health, environment, agriculture and economic development issues were the main focus of a 10-day visit to Uganda by 12 senior U.S. editors and producers who participated in the ...
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Turkey, a nation on the rise
International Reporting Project (IRP) Director John Schidlovsky reports on the recent IRP Gatekeeper Editors trip to Turkey. The IRP took 11 senior US editors and ...
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International Reporting Project Visits North Korea on Gatekeepers’ Trip
Twelve senior U.S. editors and producers visited North Korea in November as part of the 10-day IRP Gatekeeper Editors trip to the Korean peninsula. To download and view a copy of ...
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2007 Gatekeepers Visit Nigeria at a Crucial Moment
Twelve senior U.S. editors spent 10 days in Nigeria to learn about a variety of key issues facing Africa’s most populous country in the run-up to critical elections that ...
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IRP Gatekeepers see Egypt at eventful time
Eleven senior U.S. editors and producers in the 2006 Gatekeepers trip to Egypt met with a wide variety of Egyptians during a two-week visit characterized by news-making events ...
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2005 Gatekeepers see diversity of India
In the world’s second most populous country, 12 senior U.S. editors and producers met with a wide cross-section of Indians, from the country’s prime minister to ...
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2004 Gatekeepers travel to Syria and Lebanon
Thirteen U.S. editors and senior producers conducted a rare, 90-minute interview with Syrian President Bashar Assad as part of their 10-day Gatekeeper Editors trip to Lebanon and ...
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Meanwhile: An Arab battleground and playground
BEIRUT and playground A traveler returning to this city for the first time in 29 years feels an odd mix of nostalgia and disorientation. Lebanon's civil war ended 14 years ago, ...
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IRP Gatekeeper Editors See South Africa’s Hope and Misery
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - "The inequalities are vast." The speaker was South African Anglican Archbishop Njongokulu Ndungane, successor to Desmond Tutu. As dynamic and ...
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IRP Gatekeeper Editors’ Firsthand Look at Brazil: AIDS, Aviation and Amazon
SAO PAULO, Brazil - In this teeming city of 15 million, Brazil's largest metropolitan area, the global scourge of AIDS would seem to be a grave threat. After all, nine out of ...
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Indonesian President Asks for Patience in Transition to Democratic Rule
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Saying he needed "more time" to solve Indonesia's political, military and economic problems, beleaguered President Abdurrahman Wahid told U.S. newspaper ...
Blog Posts RSS
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November 19, 2009 | by John Schidlovsky
Greetings from Peru
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September 16, 2009 | by John Schidlovsky
Stories . . . stories . . . and more stories
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August 18, 2009 | by John Schidlovsky
The Death of Kim Dae-jung
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July 09, 2009 | by John Schidlovsky
Next Stop: Peru
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