Pulitzer Center Champions' Exclusive Event: Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson on AI Accountability. Join the Pulitzer Center on February 23, 2023, at 1:00pm EST for a conversation with Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson, a freelance journalist and a special adviser to the Pulitzer Center's AI Accountability Network. Pulitzer Center Executive Editor Marina Walker Guevara will moderate the discussion and a Q&A with audience questions from the Zoom chat. At a time when ChatGPT and other AI tools are creating equal amounts of excitement and dread, this conversation will focus on the role journalists play reporting on and raising awareness about algorithms that touch on everything, from medicine to social welfare and the criminal justice system. This event is exclusive to Pulitzer Center Champion donors, and registration is required. If you are already a donor, please register now! Anyone who makes a donation of any size to the Pulitzer Center is a Champion. Learn more on how to become a Champ
Reminders, This and Every Week, of Work that Matters.
On this last day of 2021, I want to, first, thank you all: for producing extraordinary journalism, for taking the issues covered into schools and universities, and for participating in this work as readers, viewers, and partners. We’re incredibly grateful that so many of you have contributed financially as well and hope that those of you who haven’t as yet will consider doing so as we close out our End of the Year campaign.
To spur you along, I’d like to highlight stories and activities from just the past week, reminders of the Pulitzer Center model in action all year long:
Bringing Stories Home: Grantee Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson’s exposé on the misuse of facial recognition tools by Florida police departments, for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, is a damning reminder of continuing discrimination against racial minorities and the threats to every one of us from the gro
Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson. Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson, a freelance journalist and former Miami Herald staff writer, has reported from Argentina, India, China, and Cuba, and written for The Washington Post, Baltimore Sun, USA Today, Johns Hopkins Magazine, WYPR's The Signal, and Signs of Life in the USA (Bedford/St. Martin's). Her reporting centers on society and the individual, including challenges for people with intellectual disabilities in the courts; the crisis of sexual abuse of youths in a Baptist church; personal stories of Cuban refugees and homeless people in South Florida; and the untested use of prescribed drugs during pregnancy, among other women's health issues. Internationally, she reported on transgender people's rights and dissident Cuban journalists in Havana, as well as birth control efforts in rural Uttar Pradesh, India.Cavanaugh Simpson, a lecturer at Johns Hopkins University, earned her bachelor's from the University of Maryland, College Park;
Spy Planes and Facial Scans: 2022 OSHER Course. This course is the 2022 OSHER Intersession with John Hopkins University. This two-part course is open to the public.
Issues of social justice, climate change, and political strife can be overwhelming to consider. Solutions journalism has arisen in recent years to delve into problems, and also seek answers.
This two-session course will look at this ground-breaking journalistic trend, and explore a Pulitzer Center project by grantee Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson, who has explored police use of AI and facial recognition in minority communities: “Spy planes” over Baltimore. Flashing blue light cameras watching every resident's move. Facial recognition scans on peaceful protesters in South Florida.
This two-year investigative project, and Cavanaugh Simpson's longtime reporting on issues of social justice and abuses of power while a staff writer at the Miami Herald and elsewhere, also explores answers: Can there be limits on policin
The Longest Shadow : 9/11 leads to the militarization of US police departments wbal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wbal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.