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Eric Freedman

Knight Center for Environmental Journalism Chair and Professor Michigan State University

  • East Lansing MI

Eric Freedman teaches environmental journalism and serves as director of the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism.

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Biography

Eric Freedman is Professor of Journalism and former Associate Dean of International Studies and Programs. During his 20-year newspaper career, he covered public affairs, environmental issues and legal affairs for newspapers in New York and Michigan, winning a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of a legislative corruption scandal. He teaches environmental journalism and serves as director of the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism. He also teaches public affairs reporting, international journalism and feature writing and serves as director of the school's Capital News Service, a professional-level practicum in which students cover state government for more than 25 newspapers and online news outlets across Michigan. Freedman earned his bachelor's degree in government from Cornell University, his law degree from New York University and his master's degree in resource development from MSU. Internationally, he has taught journalism as a Fulbright scholar in Lithuania, Georgia and Uzbekistan, and given lectures and led workshops and seminars for professional journalists, students and the public in Singapore, Russia, Chile, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Japan, Estonia and Kyrgyzstan.

He served for three years as an International Scholar in the Open Society Foundation's Academic Fellowship Program, where he worked with faculty members in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication at American University of Central Asia in Kyrgyzstan.

As a professional journalist and freelancer, Freedman has written for newspapers and magazines on such environmental issues as habitat protection, parks and public lands, toxic substances, extinction, ecotourism and government regulation. At MSU, he directed the Australia Media, Environment, Culture and Tourism study abroad program, the Reporting in the British Isles study abroad program and a freshman seminar abroad on environment and media in Scotland.

His research interests include press systems and journalism practices in the former Soviet Union: environmental journalism practices and challenges; international journalists' professional standards and education; public affairs reporting; news coverage of press and human rights; and U.S. political history.

Industry Expertise

Writing and Editing
Education/Learning
Research
Media - Print

Areas of Expertise

Public Affairs
Journalism Practices
Press Systems
Environmental Journalism

Education

Michigan State University

M.S.

Resource Development

2004

New York University

J.D.

Law

1975

Cornell University

B.A.

Government

1971

News

J-School Pulitzer Winners Gather in Washington

MSU College of Communication Arts and Sciences  online

2016-03-02

Three Pulitzer Prize-winners from the J-School took part in recent events in Washington, D.C., commemorating the centennial of the prestigious awards in journalism, literature and music. M.L. Elrick, ‘90, won a 2009 Pulitzer for Detroit Free Press coverage of then-Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick’s corruption scandal.

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Why covering the environment is one of the most dangerous beats in journalism

MSU Today  online

2018-11-19

From the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Kashoggi by Saudi agents to President Trump’s clashes with the White House press corps, attacks on reporters are in the news. This problem extends far beyond the politics beat, and world leaders aren’t the only threats.

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OPINION: Mass shooting coverage shows crucial role of student journalists

Midland Daily News  online

2023-03-06

When the horrendous shooting occurred on the Michigan State University campus, student journalists rushed in to cover the tragedy, its impact on the university and community, the investigation and university security.

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Journal Articles

Publish or Perish? The Steep, Steep Path for Central Asia Journalism and Mass Communication Faculty

Journalism & Mass Communication Educator

2020

Journalism and mass communication faculty in Central Asian countries face increased institution and government pressure to produce research that appears in Scopus-indexed publications. This study interviews faculty members in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan to examine how they attempt to meet these publication requirements.

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The wolves of fate

Communicating Endangered Species

2021

In 2018, the US National Park Service announced a controversial plan to move 20–30 gray wolves from mainland United States and Canada to Isle Royale National Park to increase genetic diversity and boost a dwindling wolf population. The agency restricted physical access for journalists during the operations, citing safety concerns for the wolves and management team and logistical challenges due to the park’s remoteness.

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Preserving endangered species

Communicating Endangered Species

2021

The battle to protect endangered species and to rebuild their populations to sustainable levels is being fought on many levels, and communication about those efforts can bring science to the attention of policy makers and the citizenry, helping to set the agenda for discourse, action, and decision-making.

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