The new fellows are:
- Alister Doyle, an environment correspondent for Reuters based in Oslo, Norway, specializing in U.N. climate negotiations and science;
- Dan Falk, a freelance science journalist and author based in Toronto, Canada. His work is often heard on CBC Radio, and he’s written two popular science books, Universe on a T-Shirt and In Search of Time.
- Pawel Gorecki, a science and technology journalist based in Warsaw, Poland. He works for Newsweek Polska weekly magazine.
- Hepeng Jia, a science journalist, who launched Science News Bi-weekly, China's first magazine targeting the science community, which is also the first magazine focused on investigative science journalism in the country.
- Eli Kintisch, a policy reporter at Science magazine in Washington, whose beat includes climate, energy, Congress and federal research. His book Hack the Planet: Science's Best Hope — or Worst Nightmare — for Averting Climate Catastrophe came out last year.
- Bill Lattanzi, a freelance writer, producer and editor, specializing in science programming for television. His work includes projects for Discovery, History Channel, National Geographic Channel and Nova.
- Vincent Liota, a television producer, editor and animator whose work has appeared on NOVA scienceNOW, NOW with Bill Moyers and Nightline.
- Joyce Murdoch, a former managing editor of National Journal magazine, a former Washington Post reporter and editor, and the author of two books, including a history of the U.S. Supreme Court.
- Van Roeun, weekend editor at The Cambodia Daily, the country’s first English-language daily newspaper, and covers the natural sciences, particularly agriculture, aquaculture and other connected environment issues.
- Helen Shariatmadari, a London-based television documentary maker, working for the BBC and producing films on a broad range of science subjects, from human ecology to fundamental physics.
- Maria Stenzel, a freelance photojournalist who covers stories about science, natural history, the environment and indigenous cultures in remote regions worldwide. She is a regular contributor to National Geographic Magazine, with a special interest in Antarctica.
- Evelyn Tagbo, Associate Technology Editor at BusinessDay, Nigeria’s only business and economic daily.
