Ms.
Cooper worked as a reporter in the former Soviet Union, Africa,
and Washington, D.C., before joining CPJ in July 1998. Her voice
is well known to radio listeners in the United States from her nine
years as a correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR). She has
also reported for The Louisville Courier-Journal, the Capitol Hill
News Service, Congressional Quarterly, The Baltimore Sun, and National
Journal magazine. Appointed NPR's first Moscow bureau chief in 1987,
Cooper spent five years covering the tumultuous events of the times,
including the failed coup attempt in Moscow. She co-edited a book
of first-person accounts of that siege, Russia at the Barricades.
NPR also sent her to Beijing to cover the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy
movement. Based in Johannesburg, South Africa, from 1992-95, Cooper's
coverage there won NPR a prestigious Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University
Award in broadcast journalism. She traveled throughout Africa, writing
features and analysis on a range of subjects, including the famine
and international intervention in Somalia, the 1994 Rwandan refugee
crisis, and the cholera epidemic in Zaire. Returning to the United
States in 1995, she studied refugee policy issues as a fellow at
the Council on Foreign Relations in New York and also traveled in
Kenya, Rwanda, Zaire, Bosnia and Haiti to produce a series on refugee
policy for NPR. She has taught radio and international reporting
at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, and is
herself a journalism graduate of Iowa State University.

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