Founders of Revista Late awarded HSF grant to investigate health impact of high levels of fluorine in drinking water

The Axis of Fluoride:
Corporate Pollution


Founders of Revista Late awarded HSF grant to investigate health impact of high levels of fluorine in drinking water

Daniel Wizenberg

Alejandro Saldívar

The founders of Revista Late, a narrative-style digital magazine for Latin American readers, have been awarded a Historias Sin Fronteras reporting grant for a cross-border multimedia project on high levels of fluorine in drinking water and the impact on human health.

InquireFirst, in partnership with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Department of Science Education, awarded the grant to:

Daniel Wizenberg, an Argentine journalist who co-founded Revista Late, a nonprofit international journalism network focused on reporting on corruption, organized crime, environmental issues and human rights violations. Daniel has worked as a researcher for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, telling the stories of refugees who live in Argentina. He also worked with the Institute of War and Peace Reporting, helping create news organizations in countries confronted by freedom of expression issues. He has received grants from the Pulitzer Center and the International Center for Journalists.  Daniel is also the author of two books, including “Korea: Two Extreme Faces” about his research trip to North Korea.

Alejandro Saldívar, a Mexican journalist and co-founder of Revista Late. Alejandro is a reporter and editor at Revista Proceso in Mexico City as well as a photographer and audiovisual storyteller. Alejandro is a doctoral candidate in Art History at the National Autonomous University of México (UNAM). Since 2017 he has been a professor on the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences at UNAM.

In response to our call for proposals for a multimedia project in any area of science, health or environmental coverage, Historias Sin Fronteras received several outstanding proposals from cross-border teams of journalists throughout Latin America.

The judges selected the proposal by Daniel and Alejandro, which focuses on the high levels of fluorine that is contaminating water in towns and cities throughout Latin America. In Mexico alone, it is estimated that some 20 million people ingest water with fluoride at concentrations significantly higher than permitted by medical standards, the journalists noted in their proposal.

After decades of being told that drinking fluoridated water keeps teeth strong and reduces cavities by about 25% in children and adults, “people do not know that this can harm your health,” the judges said in making their decision.

“There is a certain amount that is naturally occurring in water, but at too high a level it can be damaging,” our judges noted.

They said this project will shine a light on a little known and little understood issue involving industrial contamination, lack of government oversight and a threat to public health.

The project will be published in October 2022.

Iván Carrillo, a Mexico-based science editor and writer and co-founder of Historias Sin Fronteras, will serve as project editor. Iván is part of the 2016-2017 generation of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT. He is a contributor to National Geographic and the Latin American editions of Newsweek and has collaborated with the Discovery Channel and CNN en Español.

By supporting this regional initiative, InquireFirst and HHMI’s Department of Science Education aim to convene, inspire and encourage the work of science writers in Latin America.

Sponsor

South American journalists to report on Covid impact in underserved communities for project supported by HSF grant

Lupus in Latin America:
Racism, Invisibility and Lack of Care

South American journalists to report on Covid impact in underserved communities for project supported by HSF grant

Alice de Souza

Jhoandry Suárez

Zoila Antonio Benito

Hector Villa León

A team of journalists from South America has been awarded a Historias Sin Fronteras reporting grant for a project on the disproportionate impact that lupus has on women of color and the ways that Covid-19 has affected the availability of much-needed treatment.

InquireFirst, in partnership with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), awarded the grant to the South American team comprised of:

Zoila Antonio Benito, a specialist in gender journalism, human rights coverage and fact-checking. Zoila is the founder and director of La Antígona, a news site in Perú that focuses on women and LGBTIQ+ issues. She has worked as a copy editor and editor of the web site of Diario La Republica (Perú), she has reported in Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Colombia, Perú, the United States, the UK and Spain. She has also participated in cross-border investigations.

Alice de Souza, a Brazilian journalist who is editor and coordinator of the Énois Journalism Laboratory and is a researcher for the Brazilian Association of Investigative Journalism (Abraji). For the past 10 years, Alice has worked as a reporter at Diario de Pernambuco, where she specializes in issues ranging from urban development to human rights to health. Her work has been published in The Intercept Brasil, Agência Pública, El Pais Brasil and Vice News.

Jhoandry Suárez, fact-checker for Colombiacheck and writer for La Vida de Nos. In 2019, Jhoandry founded the news website Venezuela Al Minuto, which now has more than 50,000 followers. He received a fellowship from Internews Health Journalism Network for Solutions Journalism for a project on access for pregnant migrant women to maternity care in Colombia.

Héctor Villa León, a Venezuelan journalist based in Perú who is the co-founder of the journalism project Cápsula Migrante, which provides information to the migrant community living in Perú. Since 2020, Héctor has collaborated with the website Venezuela Migrante, where he tells the stories of migration and human rights.  He is the recipient of a Facebook Journalism Project fellowship from the Entrepreneurial Journalism Creator program at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York (CUNY).

In response to our call for proposals on biomedical research in Latin America and/or metabolic disorders, Historias Sin Fronteras received several outstanding proposals from teams of journalists throughout Latin America.

In selecting the South American proposal, the judges said, “We were drawn to this proposal’s focus on the disproportionate impact lupus has on women of color.”

They commented that the cross-border team of journalists made a “strong pitch that brings three South American countries together with the angle of looking at underserved communities, migrants and Afro Latinas,” including the implications of a reduced supply of the much-needed medication hydroxychloroquine due to a global misinformation campaign about its effectiveness again Covid-19.  

The project “gives an opportunity to put a face on those patients who really benefit from the drug,” the judges said.

The project will be published in May 2022.

Iván Carrillo, a Mexico-based science editor and writer and co-founder of Historias Sin Fronteras, will serve as project editor. Iván is a 2021 National Geographic Explorer and he is a member of the 2016-2017 generation of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT. He is a contributor to National Geographic and the Latin American editions of Newsweek and has collaborated with the Discovery Channel and CNN en Español.

InquireFirst will be issuing a new call for proposals in April for a multimedia cross-border project on any science, health or environment subject.

By supporting this regional initiative, InquireFirst and HHMI’s Department of Science Education aim to convene, inspire and encourage the work of science writers in Latin America.

Sponsor

Central American journalists to report on cross-border water pollution in project supported by HSF grant

Motagua River:
An avalanche of waste and a looming international conflict


Jorge-Rodriguez

Jorge Rodríguez

Richard-Carbajal

Richard Carbajal

Misael-Colindres

Misael Colindres

Central American journalists to report on cross-border water pollution in project supported by InquireFirst grant

A team of journalists from Guatemala and Honduras has been awarded a 2021 Historias Sin Fronteras reporting grant for a project on cross-border water pollution that threatens to spark an international dispute in Central America.

Historias Sin Fronteras, in partnership with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), awarded the grant to the Central American team comprised of:

Jorge-Rodriguez

Jorge Rodríguez, a Guatemalan environmental journalist who in 2015 founded the digital media RevistaViatori.com which focuses on the environment, sustainable development, indigenous communities, research and science. Jorge is currently working on a campaign to raise awareness of the importance of the Program for the Conservation of the Marine Turtle in Guatemala.

Richard-Carbajal

Richard Carbajal, co-founder of the digital media Primicia Honduras (PrimiciaHonduras.hn), where he has various roles in the administration of the organization. Prior to founding Primicia Honduras in 2016, Richard was a journalist at the daily newspaper Tiempo in Tegucigalpa.

Misael-Colindres

Misael Colindres, also a co-founder of Primicia Honduras, whose investigative journalism focuses on the injustices suffered by vulnerable groups such as women, children and the LGTB community in Honduras. Before founding Primicia Honduras, Misael worked at media organizations including Maya TV, Tiempo and La Tribuna, where he investigated corruption.

In response to our call for proposals on biodiversity and/or conservation, Historias Sin Fronteras received several outstanding proposals from teams of journalists throughout Latin America.

The judges selected the Central American proposal, which focuses on environmental damage aggravated by the indifference of the governments of Guatemala and Honduras and the possibility of an international incident with geopolitical implications.

In making their decision, the judges wrote, “We are excited to see such an exemplary proposal for a cross-border journalism project. The article will dive into the tension between Guatemala and Honduras and go deeper than previous coverage to explore the environmental, social and economic impacts of the pollution problem.”

They commented that the project “shows how pollution is a binational challenge” and noted the subject is relevant to disputes among countries around the world.

The project will be published in December 2021.

Iván Carrillo, a Mexico-based science editor and writer and co-founder of Historias Sin Fronteras, will serve as project editor. Iván is part of the 2016-2017 generation of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT. He is a contributor to National Geographic and the Latin American editions of Newsweek and has collaborated with the Discovery Channel and CNN en Español.

InquireFirst has issued an additional call for proposals for a cross-border project on biomedical research in Latin America and/or metabolic disorders.

By supporting this regional initiative, InquireFirst and HHMI’s Department of Science Education aim to convene, inspire and encourage the work of science writers in Latin America.

Sponsor


Hakai Magazine publishes Historias Sin Fronteras environmental investigation

Hakai Magazine published our Central American environmental investigation on an avalanche of garbage spilling down the Motagua River from Guatemala to the Honduran coast and the Mesoamerican Reef.

The garbage that flows from the river into the ocean is threatening the rich biodiversity in the Caribbean Sea. After years of acrimony over the pollution, Honduras is threatening an international conflict.

A team of six Central American journalists — three reporters and photographers from Guatemala and three from Honduras worked on the cross-border environmental project as part of our Historias Sin Fronteras initiative.

Guatemalan environmental journalist Jorge Rodríguez and Honduran journalists Richard Carbajal and Misael Colindres were joined by photojournalists Carlos Duarte and Dony Stewart in Guatemala and Carlos Palma in telling the story of the looming international conflict caused by unbridled pollution.

The project was edited by Mexico-based science editor and journalist Iván Carrillo.

Our thanks to Hakai Magazine for publishing our Motagua River project and to the Department of Science Education at the Howard Hughes Medical institute (HHMI) for supporting our Historias Sin Fronteras cross-border journalism on the health and environmental challenges facing Latin America.

South American journalists awarded HSF grant to focus on international migration

Adrift:

Venezuelan Migration and Mental Health


Maria Laura Chang

Hector Villa León

Johanna Osorio

South American journalists awarded HSF grant to focus on international migration

Historias Sin Fronteras, in partnership with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Department of Science Education, has awarded our first 2021 reporting grant to a team of journalists from Peru, Colombia and Argentina for a cross-border public policy and mental health project on international migration.

The South American team selected for this grant is comprised of:

  • María Laura Chang, a freelance journalist in Argentina whose work has been published by media organizations such as The New York Times en Español, Revista Global, Salud con Lupa and Distintas Latitudes
  • Johanna Osorio, an investigative journalist whose work has focused on human rights and who was a member of a winning team recognized with the 2017 Excellence in Journalism award by the Inter American Press Association
  • Héctor Villa León, a journalist working in Perú who received a fellowship from the Facebook Journalism Project to attend an Entrepreneurial Journalism Creator course at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York (CUNY)

In response to our call for proposals, Historias Sin Fronteras received several project ideas focused on public policy and mental health. Our international panel of judges singled out the proposal by the South American team, which focuses on the complex issue of international migration.

The judges said the proposal addresses “a highly relevant topic which needs to be documented.”

“Migrants face multiple traumas, from fleeing to crossing to the migration process to settling in,” the judges noted. The winning proposal “explores a topic that has been ignored or rarely acknowledged, let alone told in a compelling way.”

The project will be published in June 2021.

Iván Carrillo, a Mexico-based science editor and writer and co-founder of Historias Sin Fronteras, will serve as project editor. Carrillo is part of the 2016-2017 generation of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT. He is a contributor to National Geographic and the Latin American editions of Newsweek and has collaborated with the Discovery Channel and CNN en Español.

InquireFirst will issue three additional calls for proposals in 2021. By supporting this regional initiative, InquireFirst and HHMI’s Department of Science Education aim to convene, inspire and encourage the work of science writers in Latin America.

Sponsor