High Country News called CCLP senior fellow Richard Reeves‘ latest book, Infamy: The Shocking Story of the Japanese American Internment in World War II, “heartbreaking” in a new review….Continue Reading In the News: High Country News reviews Richard Reeves’ book
Category: News
Watch: Panel discusses higher ed failing blacks and Latinos
At the second installment of the panel series Media & Society, Michelle Turner, George Sanchez, Camille Grear Rich, and Mark Lloyd discussed how higher education is failing African Americans and Latinos. Watch the full session here. The series is presented by the Institute for Development and Empowerment at Annenberg (IDEA) and the Center on Communication Leadership…Continue Reading Watch: Panel discusses higher ed failing blacks and Latinos
In the News: NPR Berlin interviews Neal Baer
NPR Berlin interviewed CCLP senior fellow Neal Baer….Continue Reading In the News: NPR Berlin interviews Neal Baer
Democracy is not just another ideology; freedom is not just another point of view
Statement by Adam Clayton Powell III at the Broadcasting Board of Governors, October 8, 2015: Mr. Chairman, Governors, Director Lansing. My name is Adam Clayton Powell III, and I am President of the Public Diplomacy Council and a Senior Fellow at the University of Southern California. But this morning I speak as an individual; the…Continue Reading Democracy is not just another ideology; freedom is not just another point of view
Immigration activist and filmmaker urges USC students to talk to those they don’t agree with
“Too often when we talk about immigration we talk with people who already agree with us,” said Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, immigration activist, and filmmaker Jose Antonio Vargas, who has traveled around the country on a speaking tour in promotion of his films Documented and White People. “I talked to many young white students who seemed…Continue Reading Immigration activist and filmmaker urges USC students to talk to those they don’t agree with
Sports can encourage dialogue between antagonistic countries, says USC public diplomacy professor
Sports can induce dialogue between countries that do not otherwise talk and serve as a perfect medium for international exchange as well as a forum to confront racism and gender violence, according to USC’s director of public diplomacy Nick Cull. “Sport can bring people together,” said Cull, speaking before CCLP senior fellow Derek Shearer’s diplomacy…Continue Reading Sports can encourage dialogue between antagonistic countries, says USC public diplomacy professor
New US international broadcasting CEO outlines his priorities
WASHINGTON — John Lansing, the new Chief Executive Officer and Director of the U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors, yesterday outlined strategies he said he is pursuing to move BBG forward. Speaking at a public meeting of the BBG Board of Governors, Lansing listed five priorities: 1. Move aggressively to shift toward digital distribution. Lansing said…Continue Reading New US international broadcasting CEO outlines his priorities
A ‘big plan’ for infrastructure
This article by CCLP senior fellow Dan Glickman was originally published in the Baltimore Sun. Few presidential candidates on either side have proposed with any specificity what I would term a “big idea” or a plan to make a real impact on the most important issue facing this country: ensuring that the middle class have…Continue Reading A ‘big plan’ for infrastructure
USC Marshall’s Jerry Giaquinta named CCLP faculty fellow
Marketing consultant, corporate executive, and Assistant Professor of Clinical Management Communication at the USC Marshall School of Business, Gerald Giaquinta, has been named a faculty fellow of the USC Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy (CCLP) at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, CCLP director Geoffrey Cowan announced today….Continue Reading USC Marshall’s Jerry Giaquinta named CCLP faculty fellow
How China and U.S. became unlikely partners on climate
This article written by CCLP senior fellow Orville Schell was originally published in Yale Environment 360. Amid tensions between the U.S. and China, one issue has emerged on which the two nations are finding common ground: climate change. Their recent commitments on controlling emissions have created momentum that could help international climate talks in Paris in…Continue Reading How China and U.S. became unlikely partners on climate