UBC journalism gift creates Canada’s first International Reporting course of its kind

Vancouver venture philanthropist Alison Lawton has donated $1 million to the UBC Graduate School of Journalism to launch Canada’s first International Reporting course that sends students abroad to cover important and under-reported issues.

The gift will enable 10 students each year to travel and produce international journalism for major media outlets focusing on broadcast and online content. Emmy Award-winning 60 Minutes producer Peter W. Klein, who joined UBC as an associate professor in 2007, will lead the course.

“We need in-depth journalism more than ever and this course offers students an opportunity to work with some of the best journalism faculty in North America,” says Mary Lynn Young, Director and Assoc. Professor, UBC Graduate School of Journalism. In a UBC pilot of the course, students produced a documentary that PBS Frontline will broadcast this summer.

Lawton, who runs Mindset Social Innovation Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to investing in social development and building awareness around important and under-covered global issues, says she believes that in-depth documentaries can change the world and facilitate democracy.

“This new course is a vehicle to inspire people to think, feel and act differently towards some of the most pressing issues of our time,” said Lawton.

The gift is one of the first independent non-profit sponsored news content creation models in Canada, similar to new sources launching in the United States. In line with UBC’s holistic approach to journalism education, the course will promote news stories for broadcast and for the web.

“My core philosophy has always been working with people, investing in human capital,” says Lawton. “This course will challenge students to look beyond the constraints of conventional mainstream media and examine the definition of conscientious reporting.”

For more information on UBC’s Graduate School of Journalism, visit www.journalism.ubc.ca.

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