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East – West Center – 2012 Health Journalism Fellowships

Deadline:         U.S. and Asian journalists will be selected by application and invitation

The 2012 Health Journalism Fellowships program will include a seven-day study tour in mainland China and another Asian country with a focus on influenza, HIV/AIDS, and other infectious diseases and public health issues. The study tour will be followed by a three-day workshop on reporting infectious diseases and other health issues at the University of Hong Kong Journalism and Media Studies Centre.10-day program tentatively scheduled for September 2012. Applications will be announced approximately six months before the program. To receive the announcement, email journalismfellowship@eastwestcenter.org

For more information, please visit the East-West Center website.

Message from UNITY President – June 2011

In 1981, I remember reading a one-column article buried inside the pages of the main section of the New York Times. It discussed a puzzling medical situation. Young gay men were being diagnosed with a form of cancer usually reserved for older people. Bruise-like spots of Karposi’s Sarcoma were appearing on their bodies. Death rapidly followed.

The article alarmed me. I remember picking up the phone and calling my good friend and neighbor Vincent to read him the story. Then I asked what between us was the obvious question: “Do you think this is what Tom has?”

Tom was a talented dancer, a young transplant from the Midwest who had moved to New York City to make it into the big time. Vincent, then an aspiring actor, was his friend,and I was Vincent’s neighbor, a single welfare mother living in New York’s Hell’s Kitchen who lived vicariously through the stories of their escapades. They reallyknew how to enjoy life!

But for months, Tom had been feeling out of sorts. And soon he was out of commission. He had been in and out of hospitals, and instead of sharing with me their latest adventure at clubs like Danceteria and the Ritz, Vincent was reporting back to me a series of serious setbacks in Tom’s health. Within months, Tom was dead. And now we know, Tom had contracted HIV and had died of AIDS.

In the early days of AIDS, it was seen as a “gay” disease, a condition relegated to “them,” a castaway group that was treated in a way that is so familiar to people of color. The reasoning was that if you were not gay, you shouldn’t be concerned.

Thirty years later, we know how wrong that thinking was.

I recently attended a reception hosted by CBS for the 2011 UNITY Global Fellows and their mentors.  These are twelve budding journalists of color who were selected to cover the UN General Assembly High Level Meeting on AIDS. Their mentors are seasoned journalists from across the country who will help them produce multiplatform stories. The fellows are members of UNITY’s alliance associations — the Asian American Journalists Association, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and the Native American Journalists Association — as well as the South Asian Journalists Association and the National Association of Black Journalists. UNITY partnered with the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) to make these fellowships possible.

Words could not express how proud I am that UNITY is part of this collaboration or my gratitude to the mentors who volunteered their time to share their skills with these young journalists.

I wish Tom were here to see this. He would have saluted the efforts with a high kick, I’m sure.

Fellowships

NIEMAN FELLOWSHIPS

U.S Nieman Fellowships are reserved for U.S. citizens, including journalists who work in foreign bureaus or who work for non-U.S. media companies. U.S. fellows receive a stipend of $60,000, a housing allowance and childcare support. More

THE KNIGHT-WALLACE FELLOWS PROGRAM

The Knight-Wallace Fellows program provides outstanding mid-career professionals the opportunity to indulge in a sabbatical year of study and reflection. The Fellowship is designed to broaden perspectives, nurture intellectual growth, and inspire personal transformation. To this end, Fellows devise a plan of study and select classes from the full range of courses offered at the University of Michigan. Additionally, prominent journalists and leading academics give twice-weekly seminars. With no deadlines, a Knight-Wallace Fellowship frees you to explore the expanse of scholarship at the University of Michigan. Application Deadline: Postmarked by February 1. Send your completed application, study plan, autobiographical statement, and work samples in duplicate. Work samples may not be reproduced and must be trimmed or mounted to 8 1/2 x 11 paper. Letters of reference must come directly from the writer

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