MANILA, Philippines – Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Rappler CEO Maria Ressa recounted her experiences with journalism and the courage required by the profession, highlighting the importance of standing up against money and power at the University of Maryland (UMD), as she received the inaugural Maria Ressa Award for Courage in Journalism.
UMD’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism hosted its first Maria Ressa Prizes on March 13, honoring journalists and news organizations who exhibited journalistic courage despite threats and challenges.
Named after her, Ressa is the inaugural recipient of the Maria Ressa Prize for Courage in Journalism, an award given to a journalist or news organization anywhere in the world who exhibits journalistic courage in the face of serious threats from government or other powerful forces.
Aside from courage in journalism, awards recognizing courage in investigative journalism, independent journalism, and student journalism were given too, which are all limited to journalists or news organizations in the US only.
ProPublica received the Maria Ressa Prize for Courage in Investigative Journalism for their coverage of the ethical lapses of US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, including luxury trips paid for by mega-donor Harlan Crow and other billionaires.
The Kansas newspaper, Marion County Record received the Maria Ressa Prize for Courage in Local or Independent Journalism for their “perseverance and continued coverage in the face of the government overreach.” Their office and its publisher’s home were raided by the police in August 2023 amid allegations of identity theft.
The Daily Northwestern, which reported the systemic hazing culture inside the Northwestern football program, received the Maria Ressa Prize for Courage in Student Journalism.
Evan Gershkovich of the Wall Street Journal, who was detained in Russia since 2023, was honored with a special citation as well.
During her keynote speech, Ressa told the attendees and her fellow awardees, what courage means: standing up against power and money, drawing and holding the line, and doing what’s right.
She highlighted how journalists are in an existential moment now, pointing out that digital journalism could likely die due to the information crisis brought by Big Tech business models: large language models, and generative AI, among others.
She ended her speech by encouraging fellow awardees, journalism majors and professors, especially the youth, to partake in the 10-point action plan to address the information crisis, she and Dmitry Muratov conceptualized in 2022.
“And finally, the last one, and this is where I hope you will take a position. Where the Gen Z will actually take those old values forward in the age of digital, right? Journalism as an antidote to tyranny. This is the year. What are you going to do?,” said Ressa. – Rappler.com