After last year´s successful training, our team is back in the Caucasus to train local journalists.
Read MoreWe are always serious when we stress that our media training workshop in Armenia doesn´t finish in Armenia. Since we left the Caucasus, we´ve been monitoring their work by helping them with pitches
Read More"Why did you all choose journalism?" This was the first question we asked. Sitting in front of us, fifteen women and two men, all young people from Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, gathering in a hote
Read MoreParallel 33 has always been related to mystery but the truth is that running into war is much easier. We have crisscrossed it overland several times over the last two decades; for those living there,
Read MoreThe recent armed conflict in Nagorno Karabakh has highlighted several gaps among the Armenian media community. Many local reporters would be dragged into a conflict zone for the first time in their li
Read MoreNeedless to say, the virus didn't make it easy for us either. We were set to fly by last February, but the pandemic was hitting hard in a place where there are hardly any barriers or firebreaks agains
Read MoreWhen should a journalist travel to a conflict zone? Is it worth taking advantage of the initial outburst or is it better to wait until the final fireworks? The ideal would be to cover the entire war,
Read MoreKarlos Zurutuza traveled to Turkey to report on a new wave of migrants and refugees trying to cross into Greece. The Greek Police turned into an unsurpassable wall for a majority who found themselves
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