Skip to main content

Associated Press to add 20 positions to expand their climate coverage

by Siddhi Ashar, Feb 22
1 minute read

The Associated Press has set out to hire 20 journalists across Africa, Brazil, India and the US to build their new climate desk. This venture has received almost 8$ million in funding from large philanthropies such as Quadrivium, William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation.

So what?

The new initiative is aimed at discussing climate change and its nested issues such as food, migration, housing, and urban planning. With the increased focus on extreme weather, sustainability, publications such as Associated Press and The Washington Post are growing their teams to provide factual coverage and analysis of what is to come. The globally widespread roles also reflect the varying ways in which climate impacts are manifesting and how regions will have to adapt locally in the coming years.

The COVID-19 crisis remains an ongoing example of the damage misinformation and unsubstantiated reporting can do. At this critical moment in the climate crisis, this move can build momentum within readers through fact-checked reports, localized climate stories, community-led solutions, emerging trends, and technologies. An informed and educated populace may be the answer to influencing large-scale system change through them taking to the streets, leading community initiatives or joining decision-making spaces.

Sources

Details

by Siddhi Ashar Spotted 51 signals

With a background in international studies and filmmaking, Siddhi works with the Futures Centre team to creatively push our current imaginaries and create more positive visions of futures rooted in equity. Her works centers around challenging common narratives and working agilely to bring forth more representative ones. Through her role at the Futures Centre, she focuses on the answering the question, how can better climate communication and visioning help stakeholders work together and act intently, empathetically and urgently?

Have you spotted a signal of change?

Register to receive the latest from the Futures Centre.
Sign up

  • 0
  • Share

Join discussion

Related signals

Our use of cookies

We use necessary cookies to make our site work. We'd also like to set optional analytics cookies to help us improve it. We won't set optional cookies unless you enable them. Using this tool will set a cookie on your device to remember your preferences.

For more detailed information about the cookies we use, see our Cookies page.

Necessary cookies

Necessary cookies enable core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility. You may disable these by changing your browser settings, but this may affect how the website functions.

Analytics cookies

We'd like to set Google Analytics cookies to help us to improve our website by collecting and reporting information on how you use it. The cookies collect information in a way that does not directly identify anyone. For more information on how these cookies work, please see our 'Cookies page'.

>