Top Image

Follow us on Twitter

IOA upcoming events

  • February 9, 2010
    6:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
     Reconstructing Haiti, Saving a Unique Culture
    Register/Donate
    Read more

  •  March 1, 2010
    6:30 p.m. – 7:45 p.m.
    Speaker Series
    : A conversation with Ambassador Heraldo Muñoz
    Read more

  •  May 10-12, 2010
    XIX Annual Latin American Energy Conference
    The La Jolla Conference
    La Jolla, CA
    Read more

The Founders Circle

 Join the Founders Circle

Subscribe to IOA News

Friends of the Americas JOIN US


San Diego Latin Film Festival 2010

The Institute is, again this year, a community partner of the
Media Arts Center San Diego and its Latino Film Festival


programs

6th Annual Jack F. Ealy Workshop on Science Journalism

Print E-mail

July 7-16, 2009

Ealy video
  | This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it  

6° Taller de Periodismo Científico Jack F. Ealy

The Institute of the Americas is proud to announce the winners of 15 full scholarships to the sixth annual Jack F. Ealy Workshop on Science Journalism to be held July 7-16.

 This year’s winners of the scholarship funded by the Fundacion Ealy Ortiz were chosen from almost 200 print, radio and television journalists reporting throughout the Western Hemisphere.

 The workshop and the Ealy scholarship, which are designed to encourage in-depth, comprehensive coverage of science, health and environmental issues, were initiated by Juan Francisco Ealy Ortiz, president of the board of Mexico City-based El Universal in honor of his late father, Jack F. Ealy.  
 
The winners are:

Lucas Viano,Diario La Voz del Interior, Argentina

Teresa Elisa Clemente dos Santos, Agencia Notisa, Brasil

Oriana Fernández González, Periódico La Tercera, Chile

María Fernanda Landea, Zamudio, Televisión Nacional de Chile y Centro de Envejecimiento y Regeneración, Chile

Maria Luzdary Ayala Villamil, Revista Ecoguia, Colombia

Carolina Martínez, El País, Colombia

Tania Rafaelina  Molina, Omnimedia / Periódico Diario Libre, Dominican Republic

María Magdalena Reyes Martínez, El Diario de Hoy, El Salvador

Carlos Domínguez, Canal 12, El Salvador

Sebastian Escalon, Siglo XXI, Guatemala

Oscar Ernesto Méndez García, Grupo Imagen, Excélsior y Cadena 3, Mexico

Nelly Sandra Luna Amancio, Empresa Editora El Comerico, Peru

Catalina Arevalo, Agencia EFE, Spain

Lucia Cuozzi, Agencia Piso Trece Comunicación y Revista Teco - Diario El País, Uruguay

Alejandra Isabel Hernández Mejías, Diario El Carabobeño, Venezuela


“We are exceptionally  impressed with the excellent work submitted by  this year’s applicants,” said Jeffrey Davidow, president of the Institute of the Americas. “Their outstanding coverage of issues ranging from climate change to pandemics demonstrates their commitment to clear and accurate reporting on issues that are critical to the region’s future.”

The journalists are also finalists for two Jack F. Ealy Scientific Journalism Awards, the second annual awards for outstanding coverage of science, health and the environment since the Institute of the Americas science journalism program began in 2003. Winners will be announced and a cash prize awarded on July 13.
 
  buy cialis online
 IOA Newsmakers

Political and economic reforms needed in Mexico, analyst Denise Dresser says at IOA Tequila Talk

Denise Dresser at the institute of the Americas in La Jolla

LA JOLLA-Political analyst and journalist Denise Dresser spoke at the Institute of the Americas on Jan. 20 about Mexico’s political and economic reforms to an audience of nearly 150 people who braved torrential rain to hear her remarks.

In a measured and often witty tone, Dresser said the single most important change Mexico needs is reelection to political office. Why? Because politicians are not accountable, and, although not reelected, move from one political seat to the next without impunity, she said.

Dresser described Mexico as a democracy without representation, which is unable to produce economic equity for its 105 million citizens.

The past 10 years, have cast Mexico into paralysis: Electoral reform worked, but people became complacent and did not seek the necessary structural reforms such as changes in regulatory framework, dismantling the old oligarchy, or competition and antitrust laws to level the economic playing field.

Read more


New programs planned in border cities under Merida Initiative

Active Image

LA JOLLA – U.S. and Mexican officials have agreed to implement new programs to combat the rise in drug violence in cities on the U.S.-Mexico border, leaders of the two governments said during a Dec. 4 news conference at the Institute of the Americas.

Under the Merida Initiative, “there will be a greater involvement by both governments, with projects on both sides of the border,” Guillermo Valdes, director of Mexico’s Center of Investigation and National Security (CISEN), told reporters.” Read more


For Mexico’s Huichol Indians, art is life

Active Image

LA JOLLA – It has been said that art imitates life.

For Mexico’s Huichol Indians art is the essence of life. With brightly colored yarn, beeswax and plywood, the Huichol Indians paint the story of their isolated and primitive life in the mountainous states of Jalisco and Nayarit.
Read more

Binational Task Force calls for action on U.S.-Mexico border challenges
 
Active Image

IOA president Jeffrey Davidow joined 30 business and civic leaders and former government officials from the Mexico and the United States to devise ways to improve the management of the U.S.-Mexico border. The task force, convened by the Pacific Council for International Policy and the Mexican Council on Foreign Relations, called on the U.S. and Mexican governments to “confront the challenges of border management directly and immediately.”

In the 39-page report released in December 2009, the task force said, “We identify the policies they should adopt now to secure the border, expedite legitimate crossings, manage shared resources and foster economic development.”

To read the report, click here.