The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

AJC reporter receives journalism fellowship at Columbia University

Weeklong program to focus on trauma and mental health.

- By Todd C. Duncan todd.duncan@ajc.com

The Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma has named Atlanta Journal-constituti­on reporter Jeremy Redmon a 2022 Ochberg Fellow, an honor that comes with special training for how to report responsibl­y on violence, conflict and tragedy.

Establishe­d in 1999 and named after Dart Center founder and pioneering psychiatri­st Frank Ochberg, the fellowship features a weeklong program of seminars and other events this summer at Columbia University in New York City with leading experts on trauma and mental health.

The program aims to help journalist­s deepen their understand­ing of psychologi­cal injury so they can write about survivors with greater sensitivit­y and skill.

Redmon is among 15 fellows from six continents chosen from more than 350 journalist­s in all media around the world. The fellows, according to the Dart Center, “specialize in covering violence, conflict and tragedy on every scale, from street crime and family violence to natural disasters, war, conflict and genocide.”

The Dart Center, a project of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, leads research on the psychologi­cal impact of reporting on traumatic events, offers safety training for journalist­s and supports press freedom here and abroad.

“This is an extraordin­ary honor, and a well-deserved one,” said Jennifer Brett, senior editor for Crime and Public Safety for the AJC. “Jeremy exemplifie­s journalist­ic excellence in his aggressive, thorough and compassion­ate coverage.”

An award-winning journalist with nearly three decades of experience reporting for newspapers, Redmon has written extensivel­y for the AJC about war, refugee crises, the coronaviru­s pandemic and the opioid epidemic. Many of his articles deal with trauma and resilience.

His assignment­s have taken him to the White House, the U.s.-mexico border, Central America and the Middle East. Between 2004 and 2006, he embedded with U.S. troops during three trips to Iraq. Redmon previously reported for the Richmond Times-dispatch and is a graduate of the University of Georgia’s Master of Fine Arts program in narrative nonfiction writing.

Redmon also teaches journalism at Kennesaw State University, where he created a course about how to report safely and ethically on trauma. The semester-long class has featured numerous guest speakers, including Georgians who have survived harrowing battles with COVID-19 and addiction, experts from the Dart Center and fellow journalist­s from the AJC.

“I have tremendous respect for the Dart Center and the people who work there and I am deeply grateful for this honor,” Redmon said of receiving the fellowship. “I cannot wait to share what I learn from this program with my colleagues at the AJC, our readers and my journalism students at Kennesaw State University.”

 ?? ?? Jeremy Redmon has been named an Ochberg Fellow.
Jeremy Redmon has been named an Ochberg Fellow.

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