ARAB INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISTS AND EUROPEAN ARTISTS COLLABORATE ON CUTTING-EDGE, CROSS-BORDER ENVIRONMENTAL STORYELLING TO CHANGE STORIES AND MINDS
PROJECT GIVES ARAB JOURNALISTS MORE TOOLS TO REPORT ON CLIMATE CHANGE ISSUES IN ONE OF THE MOST VULNERABLE REGIONS TO PHYSICAL CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS
To coincide with COP28 in Dubai, investigative journalists from Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism
(ARIJ)
have been working with artists from the Royal Academy of Art, the Hague, to reimagine how we tell stories about migration birds and illegal hunting, wild fires and land grabbing, and water scarcity and corrupt climate financing.
The Rewriting the Climate Headlines exhibition will feature at the 16th annual
ARIJ Forum
in Jordan (1-3 December 2023), where investigative journalists from across the Arab world come together to share their experiences of holding power to account in the region.
At the event, alumni of the ‘Non-Linear Narrative at The Royal Academy of Art’ Master programme (KABK) will present at the exhibition and the session
‘Unveiling Innovative Ways to tell the Climate Story’,
three new approaches to visual storytelling about environmental justice developed in collaboration with investigative journalists.
The session can be followed online on the 2nd of December at 19h00 CET after free registration on the website:
ARIJ 16th Annual Forum.
Together with the social media platform
We Don’t Have Time,
streams of each collaborative investigation will be published during the COP28 in Dubai to show how this work could counter resignation and climate change denial, and help spark more inclusive policy conversations with audiences.
“Cross border collaboration between artists and investigative journalists engaging in deep discussions to transfer visual investigations into art installations is cutting edge. We are very excited to see this extraordinary first of its kind experiment happening”, says Rawan Damen, the director general of ARIJ.
Why focus on environmental issues in the MENA region?
According to the Reporters Without Borders
2023 World Press Freedom Index,
the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region “continues to be the world’s most dangerous region for journalists”. The region is also a “climate change hotspot”
according to the United Nations,
meaning investigative journalists working here are doing vital work to inform the world about extreme weather in increasingly challenging circumstances.
About the Rewriting the Climate Headlines collaboration
Starting in July 2023, the teams participated in
a week-long summer
school where participants heard experts from the fields of journalism, environmentalism and art. Artists and journalists looked together at emerging narratives of climate change impact, in order to investigate how media and politics frame the reporting on topics like forest fires, water scarcity and illegal wildlife hunting, which in turn shapes public opinion.
NOTES TO EDITORS
Participating artists:
Nelleke Broeze, Sophie Czich, Jan Johan Draaistra, Cristina Lavosi, Daan Veerman and Hattie Wade
ARIJ journalists:
Munir Al-Khatib, E’thar AlAzem, Ahmed Ashour and Mohammed Komani, Yassir El Makhtoum.
Project lead:
Lauren Alexander, Rawan Damen, Niels Schrader and Boris van
Westering
Project supervision:
Lauren Alexander, Rawan Damen, Rosie Heinrich, Niels
Schrader, Boris van Westering
Exhibition design:
Julius Dusch and Suraya Latul
Graphic design:
Jungeun Lee
Production:
Dalia Barhoum, Zeina Hamouri and Liyan Shuhaiber
Special thanks to:
Ingrid Gercama, Dougald Hine, Niekolaas Lekkerkerk, Marco Minoni, Ase Johannessen, Tracy Keeling, Gonzalo Delacámara
Logos:
NLN, ARIJ, WE DONT HAVE TIME
For further comment and interviews:
Boris van Westering, borisvanwestering@gmail.com / +31611048469
Munir Al-Khatib, Editor-in-Chief ARIJ /munir@arij.net