For Immediate Release: May 23, 2007
Berkman Center Awarded Two Knight Grants
for Media Projects
Success of Global Voices and Potential of the Citizen Media Law Project Recognized by Knight Foundation News Challenge
Cambridge, MA
– The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School
announced the award of two Knight Foundation News Challenge grants
today – the only organization of the 24 winners to receive multiple
grants – with both Global Voices and the Citizen Media Law Project
acknowledged by the Knight Foundation at the Interactive Media
Conference & Tradeshow in Miami.
“We are proud to receive
these awards from the Knight Foundation, which not only help to affirm
the importance of participatory media, but the need to articulate
standards and level the playing field as citizen journalism quickly
spreads across a largely unregulated space,” said Colin Maclay,
Managing Director of the Berkman Center.
Global Voices (www.globalvoicesonline.org),
a curator and aggregator of blogs from around the world, will receive
$244,000 over two years to expand its coverage to underserved
populations by training new authors in developing nations. Global
Voices is an international effort to diversify the online conversation
by showcasing speakers from around the world, and developing tools,
institutions and relationships to help make these voices heard.
Berkman
Fellow and Global Voices co-founder Ethan Zuckerman thanked the Knight
Foundation and praised their recognition of the value that
international citizen journalism holds. “Through all of the success
that our project has experienced since it began in 2004, we have become
more aware of the difficulties in creating a globally inclusive
environment,” Zuckerman said. “We look forward to using this funding
for the outreach, training, and technology vital to a more complete and
dynamic international dialog,” he added.
Global Voices was
previously recognized by the Knight Foundation as the 2006 winner of
the Knight-Batten award for innovations in journalism. The project is
sustained through foundation and corporate funding, including support
from media company Reuters, the MacArthur Foundation, and Hivos, a
Dutch foundation.
The Citizen Media Law Project (CMLP, www.citmedialaw.org)
– a joint Berkman venture with the Center for Citizen Media – will
receive a News Challenge award of $250,000 to support the first stage
of the project, including conducting research and producing legal
guides addressing legal issues faced by citizen journalists such as
free speech, libel, newsgathering and intellectual property. The CMLP
seeks to build a community of lawyers, academics, journalists, and
others who are interested in facilitating citizen participation in
online media and in protecting the legal rights of those engaged in
speech on the Internet.
Berkman Fellow and project director
David Ardia noted: “We are excited to get started on what will be an
important resource for citizen journalists.” “We are eager to see the
CMLP become part of a wider effort to promote journalism generally and
hope our work will help to ensure that our legal system fosters an
environment suitable for open and robust speech,” he added.
The
emerging field of citizen media has been a major focus for the Berkman
Center since 2003, when weblogging pioneer Dave Winer joined the center
as a Berkman Fellow. Since that time, Berkman fellows have included
citizen media luminaries such as Doc Searls, David Weinberger, CMLP
co-founder Dan Gillmor and Global Voices co-founder Rebecca MacKinnon.
About the Berkman Center:
The
Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School is
proud to celebrate its tenth year as a research program founded to
explore cyberspace, share in its study, and help pioneer its
development. Founded in 1997, through a generous gift from Jack N. and
Lillian R. Berkman, the Center now is home to an ever-growing community
of faculty, fellows, staff, and affiliates working on projects that
span the broad range of intersection between cyberspace, technology,
and society. More information can be found at http://cyber.law.harvard.edu.
About the Knight Foundation:
The
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation promotes journalism excellence
worldwide and invests in the vitality of the U.S. communities where the
Knight brothers owned newspapers. Since 1950 the foundation has granted
more than $300 million to advance journalism quality and freedom of
expression. Knight Foundation supports ideas and projects that create
transformational change.