词条 | European Press Prize |
释义 |
The European Press Prize is an award programme for excellence in journalism across all 47 countries of Europe. It was founded in 2012 by seven European media foundations.[1] The shortlist with nominees in all categories for the 2019 Award Ceremony will be announced on the 26th of March. Nominations open each year on 1 November and close in December. In March the shortlists are announced. The prizes are awarded during the European Press Prize Ceremony in May. The first one was in De Balie in Amsterdam in 2013, the 2014 awards were given at the Reuters headquarters in London, in 2015 the European Press Prize visited the JP/Politiken headquarters in Copenhagen and the 2016 awards were presented in Prague with the help of the Forum2000 team. For the fifth anniversary in 2017, the ceremony was held in founding place De Balie in Amsterdam again. In 2018 it took place in Budapest at the Open Archives Society. FoundersThe European Press Prize was devised and founded in Amsterdam by the following people and foundations:
In 2015, The Irish Times Trust joined the European Press Prize. In 2017, Agora SA joined the European Press Prize. The Board
BureauThe Foundation's Bureau for all organizational and administrative matters is based in Amsterdam. The director is Thomas van Neerbos. CategoriesAwards will be given in four separate categories with prizes for each of €10,000:
From 2013 on, the judges will be empowered to award a special prize for particular excellence in editing, reporting, feature write and advocacy – defying categories and disciplines. In 2012 the awards were the following:
Preparatory committeeBefore the Jury sees the work, all of the submitted work is reviewed by a preparatory committee. It will start by evaluating all entries and preparing a shortlist comprised out of a maximum of six entries per category. JuryThe jury is chaired by Sir Harold Evans, editor-at-large of Thomson Reuters and the former editor of the Sunday Times. The other members of the jury are Sylvie Kauffmann, former editor-in-chief of Le Monde and also board member of the Global Editors Network, Yevgenia Albats, editor-in-chief of the Russian New Times and Jørgen Ejbøl, vice-chairman of the Jyllands-Posten Foundation[2] Winners 2013
In the Editing category, the Award was won by Ihor Pochynok, Chief Editor of Express a daily newspaper published in Lviv in the Ukraine. Express is a prime example of a local newspaper becoming the opinion leader of its region and assuming at times a national role. Unabashedly political, though not connected to any of the parties, Express went on the barricades during the Orange Revolution, but had no hesitation in criticising the incompetence and corruption of the Yushchenko-Timoshenko government which ensued. It has made enemies in all Ukrainian governments, frequently facing demands to assume a less critical stance – but nevertheless breaking investigative stories that shrug off such pressure.
In the Commentator category, the Award went to Nikos Chrysoloras from Greece, for his article ‘Why Greece must remain in the Eurozone’, published in papers across Europe. Chrysoloras, the Brussels correspondent for the Greek daily Kathimerini, made a passionate plea for his country to stay in the Eurozone. Analysing the supposed reasons for Greece's current financial and economic woes, he denounced the call for a Greek exit by ‘pundits, the broadsheet press columnists and experts … who claim to know the remedy for a country which they have rarely, if ever, visited and who have no knowledge of its economic and social history’.
In the News Reporting category, the Award was won by three reporters from Danish daily Jyllands-Posten, Orla Borg, Carsten Ellegaard Christensen and Morten Pihl for their groundbreaking investigative reporting project on Morten Storm, a former agent of the Danish Secret Service. In a series of articles, they exposed how Storm helped the CIA locate Al-Qaida leader Anwar al-Awlaki, who was subsequently killed by an American drone attack in Yemen. The story received wide coverage in the U.S. and Europe and fed a crucial debate on the role of European countries in the U.S. ‘war on terror.’ Simply, when is it right for states and their agents to kill?
In the Innovation category, the Award went to Paul Lewis from the United Kingdom, Special Projects Editor of The Guardian in London, for his project ‘Reading the Riots’. Together with Professor Tim Newburn from the London School of Economics and 30 researchers, Lewis launched a year-long research study into the causes of the summer riots in England in 2011. He analysed the mechanisms which led to both the violence and its rapid spread from the capital to other major towns and cities in Britain. It seriously questioned many assumptions about the riots, from the role of social media to the involvement of criminal gangs. Combining investigative journalism and scientific methodology, Lewis developed a unique new approach to investigative journalism, which may prove to become a powerful weapon for other journalists attempting to uncover increasingly complex and sophisticated social developments. Winners 2014
In 2013 Steve Stecklow, Babak Dehghanpisheh and Yeganeh Torbati received the Investigative Award for Assets of the Ayatollah, published by Reuters, United Kingdom.
In 2013 the Distinguished Writing Award went to Sergey Khazov for his pieces "Forbidden Islam”, “Vietnam Town” and “The man in orange”, published by The New Times magazine, Russian Federation.
The Commentator Award went to Boris Dežulović in 2013 for his piece “Vukovar: a Life-Size Monument to the Dead City”", published by Globus, Croatia.
The Innovation Award of 2013 went to Espen Sandli, Linn Kongsli Hillestad and Ola Strømman for their piece “Null CTRL”, published by Dagbladet, Norway.
In 2013 Yavuz Baydar received the Special Award for his work as ombudsman. His columns were censored. The award is a symbol of support for his fight for a free press. In the same year, Editor Alan Rusbridger from The Guardian and editor Wolfgang Buchner from Der Spiegel also received a special award for their persistence and courage in publishing the NSA stories. Winners 2015
The Distinguished Writing Award went to Elena Kostyuchenko for her piece Your husband voluntarily went under fire, published by Novaya Gazeta, Russian Federation
The Innovation Award went to the team behind The Migrants’ Files: Surveying migrants’ deaths at Europe’s door: Nicolas Kayser-Bril, Jacopo Ottaviani, Sylke Gruhnwald, Jean-Marc Manach, Jens Finnäs, Daniele Grasso, Ekaterina Stavroula, Alessio Cimarelli, Andrea Nelson Mauro and Alice Kohli. The Migrants Files were published by The Migrants' Files, Italy, Switzerland, France, Sweden, Spain, Greece
The Investigative Reporting Award went to Ander Izagirre for his work How to produce dead guerrillas, published by El País, Spain
The Commentator Award went to Nick Cohen for The Cowardice of Nigel Farage, published by The Observer, United Kingdom
The Special Award was given to The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, to founders Paul Radu, Drew Sullivan and a team of amounts others 2015 nominee Miranda Patrucić Winners 2016
The Commentator Award went to Gideon Rachman for his Gideon Rachman Commentary
The Distinguished Writing Award went to Justyna Kopinska for her work: Fear – Sick Ward
The Innovation Award went to the team behind Killing and Dying for Allah – Five Portuguese Members of Islamic State: Raquel Moleiro, Hugo Franco and Joana Beleza:
The Investigative Reporting Award went to Marion Quillard for her article: Que celles qui ont été violées lèvent la main
The Special Award was given to three projects: Amrai Coen and Henning Sussebach for their Im Gelobten Land; Gert van Langendonck: Op naar Europa and Anders Fjellberg and Tomm W. Christiansen with Våtdraktmysteriet Winners 2017
The Distinguished Writing Award went to Felix Hutt, Dialika Neufeld and Claas Relotius for their respective works: 71 Lives, Step-uncle Sam and The Story of Ahmed and Alin
The Innovation Award went to Bellingcat journalist Christiaan Triebert for The Turkish Coup through the Eyes of its Plotters
The Investigative Reporting Award went to the Center for Investigative Journalism of Serbia (CIJS) for their articles on corruption and crime.
The Commentator Award went to Fintan O'Toole for his Irish Times, Observer and Guardian columns on the Brexit.
The Special Award honoured the impressive quality of young journalists entering their work this year and was given to Irina Tacu, Ana Maria Ciobanu, Andreea Giuclea, Christian Lupsa and Oana Sandu for their article Colectiv Winners 2018
The Distinguished Writing Award went to Micheal Obert for his reportage The Human Captor
The Innovation Award went to Bureau Local, a project set op by Megan Lucero, Maeve McClenaghan, Gareth Davies, Charles Boutaud and Kirsty Styles
The Investigative Reporting Award went to Stéphane Horel and Stéphane Foucart for their Monsanto Papers
The Opinion Award went to Dragan Bursać from Bosnia for his article The third shooting of the boy Petar from Konjic
The Special Award went to Ida Nyegård Espersen for her This crime only requires poverty, internet, and a distant buyer References1. ^{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2012/may/24/awards-and-prizes-europe-news |title=Media foundations launch European Press Prize |publisher=The Guardian |accessdate=2012-05-27 |location=London |first=Roy|last=Greenslade|date=24 May 2012}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://politiken.dk/kultur/tvogradio/ECE1635021/mediehuse-stifter-europaeisk-pulitzer-pris/|title=Mediehuse stifter europæisk Pulitzer-pris|language= Danish|publisher=Politiken|accessdate=2012-05-28}} External links
2 : Journalism awards|Awards established in 2012 |
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