"CPJ welcomes these three fine journalists to our
board," CPJ Chairman Paul E. Steiger said. "They all bring extensive experience
in foreign reporting from all parts of the globe as well as a proven commitment
to freedom of the press. They will be an invaluable addition to our efforts on
behalf of journalists worldwide."
Carroll is executive editor and senior vice
president of The Associated Press, overseeing content from the AP's journalists worldwide. She guided the
AP's transition into new media, and
brought and new depth and sophistication to its coverage. Carroll has been a
leader in the AP's effort to
safeguard its journalists in war zones and other hostile areas, and has been a
writer and editor in four AP bureaus.
At Knight Ridder, Carroll directed Washington and international coverage for
newspapers and multimedia. Prior to joining AP in Dallas in 1978, she was a reporter at The Dallas Morning News. She has served on
the Pulitzer Prize Board since 2003.
Logan is CBS News' chief foreign affairs
correspondent, covering foreign affairs and international security issues from
Washington.
She earned a reputation as one of the world's best foreign correspondents while
reporting from the war in Iraq. Logan was one of the only
journalists from an American network in Baghdad
when the U.S. military invaded the city,
reporting live from Firdos
Square as the statue of Saddam fell. She has also
reported extensively from Afghanistan, on the attempted
assassination of Hamid Karzai, and from the frontlines with the Green Berets
searching for Al-Qaeda and Osama Bin Laden. Logan
reported from Pakistan on the assassination of
Benazir Bhutto and its aftermath, conducting a penetrating interview for "60
Minutes" with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf after Bhutto's death. She
has been the recipient of multiple awards including an Emmy Award, an Overseas
Press Club Award and an RTNDA/Edward R. Murrow Award for "Ramadi: On the Front
Line," a powerful 2006 report on American troops under fire in Ramadi, Iraq.
Schlesinger, editor-in-chief of Reuters
News at Thomson Reuters, is a long-time global advocate for press freedom and
the safety of journalists in the field, most recently in the Middle East and
Africa, where several Reuters journalists have
been endangered, imprisoned, or killed in the past few years. Schlesinger joined
Reuters in 1987 as a correspondent in the Hong
Kong bureau. From 1989 to 1995, he oversaw Reuters editorial
operations in Taiwan,
China, and the Greater China region.
He then became financial editor and managing editor for the Americas, in New York, before serving as Reuters global
managing editor. Schlesinger is also a director of the Thomson Reuters
Foundation, chairman of the Dannenberg Oberlin-in-London Program, and an
advisory board member of the International News Safety Institute.
CPJ is a New York-based independent, nonprofit
organization founded in 1981 to promote press freedom worldwide. CPJ is active
in more than 120 countries. CPJ's board represents a broad spectrum of
U.S. and international journalism.
Board members accompany staff members on missions, support efforts to win the
release of imprisoned journalists around the world, and oversee the activities
of the organization.
The other board members are: Andrew Alexander, Franz
Allina, Christiane Amanpour, Terry Anderson, Dean
Baquet, Tom Brokaw, Rajiv Chandrasekaran, Sheila Coronel, Walter Cronkite, Josh
Friedman, Anne Garrels, James C. Goodale, Cheryl Gould, Charlayne Hunter-Gault,
Gwen Ifill, Steven L. Isenberg, Jane
Kramer, David Laventhol, Anthony Lewis, David Marash, Kati
Marton, Michael Massing, Geraldine Fabrikant Metz, Victor Navasky, Andres
Oppenheimer, Burl Osborne, Charles L. Overby, Clarence Page, Norman Pearlstine,
Erwin Potts, Dan Rather, Gene Roberts, Sandra Mims Rowe, Diane Sawyer, John Seigenthaler, Paul C. Tash, Mark Whitaker, Brian
Williams, and Matthew Winkler.
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