Today, we welcome 15 Class of 2025 国产视频 Fellows to 国产视频. This class of Fellows includes storytellers dedicated to enhancing conversations around the most pressing issues of our time.
Please join us in welcoming the Class of 2025; and read their bios.
This month serves as both an inflection and reflection point as we look forward to supporting the professional journey of this new cohort while also pausing to reflect on the impact made by last year鈥檚 class.
Since last September, the Class of 2024 has had a remarkable year. They published and produced work that will shape our understanding of a range of issues, including immigration, psychedelic drugs, prison reform, and more.
We have compiled a list of highlights from their fellowship year. We hope you enjoy catching up on the work from the Class of 2024!
Highlights from the Class of 2024:
- Atossa A. Abrahamian about the concept of citizenship and its value for Foreign Affairs. Her book, , will be published in October 2024.
- Rozina Ali three Palestinian students who were shot in Vermont for the New York Times Magazine. Ali also worked on her Fellows project, a book about the recent history of Islamophobia in the United States.
- Victor J. Blue鈥檚 film for the New Yorker, Swift Justice, for a News and Documentary Emmy in the category Outstanding Cinematography: Documentary.
- Kate Daloz worked on her Fellows project, a book that expands the story of her grandmother鈥檚 1944 death by self-induced abortion into a 300-year history of reproductive healthcare in America.
- Caitlin Dickerson about migrants crossing the Dari茅n Gap for the cover of the September issue of The Atlantic.
- Casey Gerald Eryka Badu for Dallas Magazine. He on the magazine鈥檚 Ear Burner podcast to discuss the piece and his past work.
- Olivia Goldhill for STAT on psychology, pharma, and mental health and worked on her book about the race to create and control the legal psychedelic market.
- Malaika Jabali about the history of Juneteenth for Essence and worked on her book about Black Midwesterners, which seeks to reframe dominant, misleading narratives of the working class and their crucial role in our democracy.
- Sarah Esther Maslin worked on her book about the long aftermath of the El Mozote massacre and the impact of violence, trauma, and impunity on a community and a country.
- Ben Mauk about Sami reindeer herders for The Dial and worked on his book about life outside the administrative state, provisionally titled The Fugitive World.
- Laura Mauldin worked on her book Care Nation, which investigates America鈥檚 failure to provide meaningful support to disabled people and the resulting reliance on unpaid family caregivers, such as spouses.
- JoeBill Mu帽oz鈥檚 film, , premiered at the HotDocs Film Festival in Toronto. The film, which tells the story of a generation of California men as they endure decades of solitary confinement and, against all odds, launch the largest hunger strike in US history, will air on PBS in 2025.
- Sian-Pierre Regis participated in a 国产视频 event for the book The Unexpected Magic of Caring for Others, in which he is featured, with author Elissa Strauss and journalist Katherine Goldstein.
- Jiayan 鈥淛enny鈥 Shi for the Sundance Institute and The Asian American Foundation鈥檚 Fellowship and Collab Scholarship. Shi is at work on her film, Untitled Scientist Project, a documentary that explores the relationship between politics and science.
- Matthew Wolfe an Op-ed in the New York Times examining 鈥渢he climate missing鈥濃攖he growing number of disappearances created by the effects of climate change, including disasters, migration, and conflict.