-
Recent Posts
- When Worlds Collide #70: Sailing the Stormy Seas of Social Media
- When Worlds Collide #69: Public Trust in Times of Global Pandemics
- When Worlds Collide #68: Imagine That! Analyse This!
- When Worlds Collide #67: Star Trek to Utopia: The Journey Continues…
- When Worlds Collide #66: Indian Ocean: Wild West of the 21st Century?
- When Worlds Collide #65: When Making Fun is No Laughing Matter…
- When Worlds Collide #64: Good Governance for Clean Energy
- When Worlds Collide #63: Looking for Real Cities in Sri Lanka
Archives
Categories
Meta
Recent Comments
Tag Archives: environmental journalism
When Worlds Collide #21: Walking in Rio with Three Friendly Ghosts…
Text of my ‘When Worlds Collide’ column published in Ceylon Today Sunday newspaper on 24 June 2012 As government officials, activists, researchers and journalists from around the world converged in Rio de Janeiro this week for the UN Conference on … Continue reading
Posted in Communicating Development, Environment, Environmental policy, Film making, Journalism, Science Journalism, South Asia, Sustainable Development
Tagged Adrian Cowell, Amazon forest, Anil Agarwal, Cariocas, Centre for Science and Environment India, City of God, Darryl D’Monte, environmental journalism, environmental journalist, favelas, Kamal Nath, Rio de Janeiro, Rio+20, Robert Lamb, SciDev.Net, Sunita Narain, UN Conference on Sustainable Development
1 Comment
When Worlds Collide #20: Can Journalists Save the Planet?
Text of my ‘When Worlds Collide’ column published in Ceylon Today Sunday newspaper on 17 June 2012 I have a confession to make: I was once an environmental journalist. With all good intentions, I thought I could help save the … Continue reading
Posted in Environment, Environmental policy, Journalism, Media, Science Journalism, Sri Lanka, Sustainable Development
Tagged environmental journalism, environmental journalist, Gro Harlem Brundtland, Kalpana Sharma, Rio de Janeiro, Rio+20, Tarzie Vittachi, UN Conference on Sustainable Development, World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED)
3 Comments