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A
seminar for editors sponsored by The Crimes of War Project
and The Freedom Forum
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AGENDA: DAY TWO
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Introduction
Elizabeth
Neuffer
a)
What is in the Law Right Now?
Ken
Anderson, Associate Professor, Washington College
of Law, American University
b)
How Has the Law Changed in the Past Decade?
David
J. Scheffer, U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for War
Crimes Issues
c)
Why Does the United States Avoid Some Key Documents
and Institutions?
James
A. Burger, Col. JAGC (Ret.), Assoc. Deputy General
Counsel, Office of the General Counsel of the Secretary
of Defense
d)
How Can the Law Serve as a Basis for "Humanitarian
Intervention"?
Col.
Charles J. Dunlap, Staff Judge Advocate, U.S.
Central Command Air Forces/9th U.S. Air Force
Discussion
(Panelists
and audience)
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This
panel examined such questions as: Can an understanding
of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) improve coverage
of armed conflicts by opening up new leads for stories,
or by providing new ways to cover old stories? Does
knowledge of IHL improve a reporter's understanding
of the dynamics of a given conflict?
a)
The Major Story that Usually Gets Away
Roy
Gutman, International Security Reporter, Newsday
President, Crimes of War Project
b)
The Silent Guardian: ICRC
Urs
Boegli, Head of Media Dvision, ICRC, Geneva Headquarters
c)
When Sources Prove to be Liars
Nancy
Durham, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
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Special
Discussion on Sierra Leone
Olara
Otunnu, UN Under-Secretary-General, Special Representative
of the Secretary-General for Children in Armed Conflict
How
Do You Get it in the Paper?
Steve
Coll, Managing Editor, The Washington Post
Accountability:
Theme for the Decade
Michael Muskal, Deputy Foreign Editor, Newsday
(Transcript not available.)
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This
session provided a practical look at how to take evidence
and testimony from the field, what kind of questions
to ask, and how to use the law to build a story.
Introduction
Eric
Stover
a)
Satellite Remote Sensing and War Crimes
Christopher
Simpson, Director, Project on Satellite Imagery
and the New Media, School of Communication, American
University
b)
Making It Count: Journalists, Statistics, and Human
Rights
Patrick
Ball, Deputy Directory, Science and Human Rights
Program, American Association for the Advancement
of Science
c)
From Rwanda to East Timor: Collecting Physical Evidence
of War Crimes
William
D. Haglund, Director, International Forensic Program,
Physicians for Human Rights
Discussion
(Panelists
and audience)
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This
session examined the issue of how covering war crimes
and other traumatic events may affect journalists.
It addressed questions such as, What kind of services
should be available? What can the field of journalism
learn from other "first responders?"
Introduction
Frank
Smyth
Panelists:
-Chris
Cramer, President, CNN International
-Frank
M. Ochberg, M.D., founding Board Member of the
International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies,
consultant to the FBI, U.S. Secret Service, and National
Security Council
-Sherry
Ricchiardi, Professor, Indiana University, School
of Journalism and Writer, American Journalism Review
-Dr.
Anthony Feinstein, University of Toronto, Sunnybrook
Medical Center
Discussion
(Panelists
and audience)
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Sherry Ricchiardi, Professor, Indiana University,
School of Journalism and Writer, American Journalism
Review
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Eugene
Roberts, University of Maryland, School of Journalism
Roy
Gutman, International Security Reporter, Newsday,
President, Crimes of War Project
John
Owen, Director, The Freedom Forum, U.K.
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Thom
Shanker, New York Times, Assistant Washington
Editor
This was an informal session to evaluate the seminar
and to identify what types of additional training
are needed and/or available, including for journalism
schools.
Transcript not available.
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