Staff Bio

Maralee Schwartz

Maralee Schwartz spent more than two decades as a reporter and editor at the Washington Post. She began her career as a journalist at the Washington Monthly. She joined the Washington Post in 1979 as a researcher on the national staff, eventually becoming a political reporter. During the 1992 general election, Schwartz moved onto the assignment desk, editing political stories, and […]

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Nicco Mele

Nicco Mele will be the Visiting Lecturer in the Murrow Chair. He will teach a Kennedy School course on the Internet as a mechanism for communication, with a special emphasis on its use in politics. He is the founder and president of EchoDitto, a leading Internet strategy consulting company. Mele has broad experience working with

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Sandra Nyaira

Sandra Nyaira was a reporter for the Association of Zimbabwe Journalists. In addition to writing for the Association, Nyaira’s work has appeared in the London Times, the Guardian and the British Journalism Review. Prior to joining the Association, Nyaira was the political editor of the now-banned Zimbabwean independent newspaper, the Daily News. As political editor, she oversaw award-winning coverage

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Rory O'Connor

Rory O’Connor

Rory O’Connor is an author, blogger, journalist and filmmaker. He is co-founder and president of the media firm Globalvision, and oversees the nonprofit media-watchdog site MediaChannel.org. He has served as co-executive producer of the broadcast newsmagazines South Africa Now and Rights & Wrongs: Human Rights Television. He is the author of the recently published Shock Jocks: Hate

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Eric Pooley

Eric Pooley is a contributor for Time magazine. Pooley has been managing editor of Fortune, editor of Time Europe, and in 2001–2 was national editor of Time. Before that, he was Time‘s chief political correspondent. In 1996, as Time‘s White House correspondent, Pooley won the Gerald Ford Prize for Excellence in Reporting for his coverage of the Clinton administration. Previously, Pooley had a

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Edward Schumacher-Matos

Edward Schumacher-Matos is the CEO and founder of Rumbo Newspapers and Meximerica Media, a chain of four Spanish-language dailies in Texas. Schumacher-Matos began his career as a reporter at the Patriot Ledger before moving on to the Philadelphia Inquirer. For nearly a decade afterwards, Schumacher-Matos worked at the New York Times, first as the New York City economic-development reporter and later

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Philip J. Hilts

Philip J. Hilts

Philip J. Hilts, an author and journalist, was a Goldsmith Fellow at the Shorenstein Center. He is the author of Protecting America’s Health: The FDA, Business and One Hundred Years of Regulation. The book received the Los Angeles Times Book Award for the best science and technology book published in 2006. His book Smokescreen: The Truth

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J.H. Snider

J.H. Snider

J.H. Snider is a scholar who has written extensively about new technology and democracy. He is the president of iSolon.org and an affiliated researcher at Columbia University’s Institute for Tele-Information. He was research director for the New America Foundation, a Washington, DC-based think tank. His books include Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick: How Local TV

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Elizabeth Becker

Elizabeth Becker

Elizabeth Becker, an author and journalist, was the Edelman Family Fellow at the Shorenstein Center. Becker has had a long and distinguished journalism career, from her time as a reporter at the Washington Post (1972–80), senior foreign editor at National Public Radio (1992–95), and as a reporter for The New York Times (1995–2005). She has been a war

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Richard Davis

Richard Davis

Richard Davis is a professor of political science at Brigham Young University. He is the author or co-author of many books on media and politics including Electing Justice: Fixing the Supreme Court Nomination Process; Politics Online: Blogs, Chatrooms, and Discussion Groups in American Democracy; and The Web of Politics: The Internet’s Impact on the American Political System. In

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Nguyen Anh Tuan

Nguyễn Anh Tuấn

Nguyễn Anh Tuấn is chairman of the VietnamNet Media Group and the editor-in-chief of VietnamNet. Nguyen is also the founder of the VASC Software and Media Company and VietNet, the first Internet service provider in Vietnam to provide email and Web access. Nguyen began his career as a faculty member at the University of Dalat

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Robin Sproul

Robin Sproul

Robin Sproul, vice president and Washington bureau chief of ABC News, was a Kalb Fellow at the Shorenstein Center. Responsible for the editorial supervision and management of the network’s bureau, Sproul oversees news coverage of all Washington beats and serves as the network’s liaison to the federal government on news policy matters. Sproul has earned

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Tom Fiedler

Tom Fiedler is recently retired after a 35-year career at The Miami Herald. During those years, Fiedler worked as an investigative reporter, political columnist, editorial-page editor and as the Herald‘s executive editor from 2001–2007. Having covered nearly every aspect of government, Fiedler has won several awards throughout his career. In 1988, he received the Society of Professional Journalists’ top

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Geoffrey Cowan

Geoffrey Cowan

Geoffrey Cowan is a professor at the University of Southern California, occupying the Annenberg Family Chair in Communication Leadership at the Annenberg School for Communication. Cowan also directs USC’s Center on Communication Leadership and, from 1996 until July 2007, was the dean of the Annenberg School. Before joining USC, Cowan served under President Clinton as director

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Carol

Carol Darr

Carol Darr is the director of the Institute for Politics, Democracy and the Internet at the Graduate School of Political Management at The George Washington University, where she is also an associate research professor. She has spent most of her career in national politics and government and served as the General Counsel to the Democratic

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Matthew A. Baum

Matthew A. Baum

Matthew A. Baum is a Visiting Associate Professor of Public Policy. He joined the Kennedy School faculty in July 2006 and is an associate professor of political science and communication studies at UCLA. Baum’s research focuses on integrating domestic political variables into theories of international conflict and cooperation in general and American foreign policy in

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Michael Maier

Michael Maier

Michael Maier, founder and CEO of the German company Blogform Publishing, was the Shorenstein Center’s Sagan Fellow during the spring of 2007. The Austrian-born journalist worked as editor for Die Presse, a Vienna daily, for Berliner Zeitung, Stern magazine and Netzeitung, Germany’s first newspaper exclusively published on the internet. Maier also worked as a columnist for the Austrian

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Mark Halperin

Mark Halperin

Mark Halperin, political analyst at ABC News, was a joint visiting fellow with the Institute of Politics and Shorenstein Center in the spring of 2007. He is a regular correspondent and political analyst on ABC News television and radio programs. Halperin joined ABC News in January 1988 as a desk assistant. Later that year, Halperin

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Ellen Goodman

Ellen Goodman

Ellen Goodman, the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, was a Goldsmith Fellow at the Center. Goodman began her career as a researcher for Newsweek magazine, before becoming a reporter for the Detroit Free Press in 1965. She joined the Boston Globe as a reporter in 1967 and became a full-time columnist in 1974. A 1963 graduate of Radcliffe College, Goodman

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Linda Douglass

Linda Douglass

Linda Douglass, longtime ABC and CBS political correspondent, was the first Kalb Fellow at the Shorenstein Center. Douglass retired from ABC News in December 2005, where she worked for nine years as a correspondent in the Washington, D.C., bureau. She became the network’s congressional correspondent in 1998 and was named chief Capitol Hill correspondent in

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