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Cristine Russell

Cristine Russell

Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

Contact:
Telephone: 617-496-4140
Fax: 617-495-1635
Email: cristine_russell@ksg.harvard.edu

 

 

By Publication Type

 

July 17, 2008

"Climate Change: Now What?"

Journal Article, Columbia Journalism Review

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

Media coverage of climate change is at a crossroads, as it moves beyond the science of global warming into the broader arena of what governments, entrepreneurs, and ordinary citizens are doing about it.

 

 

March 24, 2008

"The Survival of Investigative Journalism"

Journal Article, Columbia Journalism Review

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

A recent Harvard journalism roundtable featuring prize-winning investigative reporters who have uncovered health scandals from Iraq to China suggested that while a few big papers-at least for the moment-are still putting a premium on investigative coverage, other regional and local papers are struggling to do so.

 

March 6, 2009

Washington Post Pools Its Resources

Magazine or Newspaper Article, Columbia Journalism Review

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

In the latest of many recent changes at The Washington Post, the management has announced a new plan to coordinate all health, science and environmental coverage paper-wide—from national to lifestyle—under a single editor.

 

 

March 4, 2009

Globe Kills Health/Science Section, Keeps Staff

Magazine or Newspaper Article, Columbia Journalism Review

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

This week, The Boston Globe stopped running its highly regarded Monday Health/Science section and began placing its content in the paper’s trendy new “g” lifestyle tabloid, as well as its business section. It is the latest casualty at the struggling but storied New England paper, located in what is arguably the center of the health, science, and technology universe. According to health and science editor Gideon Gil, the Globe’s nine-person specialty staff is expected to stay intact—at least for now—and coverage of everything from stem cells to climate change will still have high priority in the paper.

 

Summer 2011

"CRISTINE RUSSELL: What happens at the intersection of media and science?"

Newsletter Article, Belfer Center Newsletter

By Joseph Leahy and Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

When Cristine Russell chose nuclear energy as the topic of the third seminar in the Belfer Center spring series, “Clean Energy and the Media," no one knew of the radioactive disaster that would unfold in Japan. Two weeks after an earthquake and tsunami crippled reactor cooling mechanisms at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, the seminar's discussion with scientists and journalists provided valuable insight at a critical point in the crisis.

 

Wikimedia Commons

January 5, 2013

The American Woman Who Wrote Equal Rights Into Japan's Constitution

Op-Ed, The Atlantic

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

American efforts to pass an Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution have failed since the early 1920s. But, in 1946, a 22-year-old naturalized American citizen participating in a secret crash project in occupied postwar Japan succeeded in writing two strikingly simple but powerful clauses into the modern Japanese constitution that stipulate equality among the sexes as well as civil rights for women involving marriage, money, and family.

 

 

AP Photo/Cliff Owen

August 28, 2011

Exit Obama, Enter Irene: A Dispatch From Martha's Vineyard

Op-Ed, The Atlantic

By Ben Heineman, Senior Fellow, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

The Coast Guard cutter that was moored calmly off our beach on Martha's Vineyard is gone.  So is the man it was protecting,  our quiet neighbor, the president of the United States.  He left two days ago, after a tranquil week of fair skies and moderate winds and a largely private family vacation.

Today, we confront a new visitor who is brusquely making her  presence known.  As hurricane Irene storms into New England,  the sea is already a foaming white fury; the wind is whistling through the eaves; the rain is slanting like descending spears: the barrier beach separating the pond and the ocean has disappeared under crashing waves; and tall trees are bowing down to the gods of nature. And the worst is yet to come, with winds on the east side of the storm, where we are, intensifying throughout the day.

 

 

19 June 2009

"Science Journalism Goes Global"

Op-Ed, Science, volume 324

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

When swine flu struck swiftly in Mexico, it created a challenge not only for international public health officials but also for journalists around the world assigned to follow the unfolding story. They needed to explain, in the face of great uncertainty and a nonstop news cycle, what the novel influenza A (H1N1) virus was and the potential dangers it posed. It was a difficult story handled most capably by experienced health and science reporters.

 

 

October 17, 2008

"Juggling Beats, Localizing Climate"

Op-Ed, Columbia Journalism Review

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

When it comes to tackling a big issue like climate change, reporters have their hands full getting a grip on the science and the policy options. To get help, twenty-eight print, television, and Web journalists from a variety of beats and backgrounds who were invited to a three-day conference aimed at arming them with the tools for writing about climate change in a meaningful way.

 

 

December 11, 2007

"Celebrities, scientists and polar bears, oh my"

Op-Ed, Chicago Tribune

By Cristine Russell, Senior Fellow, Environment and Natural Resources Program

What a difference a year makes. In 2006, global warming stories were still struggling for front-page attention. By 2007, climate change was the issue du jour and "going green" a daily staple in news stories about everything from home building to Wall Street banking. Much of the credit for this dramatic transformation certainly goes to former Vice President Al Gore and the UN panel of climate change scientists who received the Nobel Peace Prize on Monday.

 

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