James Glanz
James Glanz | |
---|---|
Status | Married |
Occupation | journalist |
Notable credit | The New York Times |
James Glanz is an American journalist who was appointed as Baghdad bureau chief of The New York Times[1] in 2007.
Glanz joined the Times in 1999.[2] Articles he wrote with Eric Lipton and others on the World Trade Center were chosen as a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in explanatory journalism in 2002. Articles Lipton and Glanz wrote were also a part of the Nation Challenged package that won a Pulitzer for Public Service in 2002. He received three Gerald Loeb Awards – the 2020 Breaking News award for "Crash in Ethiopia,"[3] and two consecutive Visual Storytelling awards, first in 2021 for "Visualizing the Pandemic Economy"[4] and again in 2022 for "Why the Mexico City Metro Collapsed".[5][6]
Glanz has a Ph.D. in astrophysical sciences from Princeton University.
Notes
- ^ Calderone, Michael (April 18, 2007). "Times Names James Glanz as Baghdad Bureau Chief". The New York Observer. Retrieved December 6, 2018.
- ^ The New York Times Ask a Reporter Q&A: James Glanz
- ^ Trounson, Rebecca (November 13, 2020). "Anderson School of Management announces 2020 Loeb Award winners in business journalism" (Press release). UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
- ^ Daillak, Jonathan (September 30, 2021). "Winners of the 2021 Gerald Loeb Awards Announced by UCLA Anderson in Live Virtual Event" (Press release). Los Angeles: UCLA Anderson School of Management. Retrieved October 7, 2021.
- ^ "Times Wins 3 Loeb Awards". The New York Times Company. September 30, 2022. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
- ^ Kitroeff, Natalie; Abi-Habib, Maria; Glanz, James; Lopez, Oscar; Cai, Weiyi; Grothjan, Evan; Peyton, Miles; Cegarra, Alejandro (June 13, 2021). "Why the Mexico City Metro Collapsed". The New York Times. Retrieved October 17, 2022.
External links
- The New York Times author page
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- 2008: Jenny Anderson, Landon Thomas Jr.
- 2008 (HM): Katie Merx, Tim Higgins, Tom Walsh, Mark Phelan, Susan Tompor, Sarah A. Webster, Katherine Yung, Joe Guy Collier
- 2009: Carrick Mollenkamp, Susanne Craig, Serena Ng, Aaron Lucchetti, Matthew Karnitschnig, Dan Fitzpatrick, Deborah Solomon, Dennis K. Berman, Liam Pleven, Peter Lattman, Annelena Lobb
- 2010: Christine Tierney, David Shepardson, Gordon Trowbridge
- 2011: Tom Lauricella, Peter A. McKay, Scott Patterson, Jenny Strasburg, Robin Sidel, Carolyn Cui, Mary Pilon
- 2012: Brent Snavely, Greg Gardner, Chrissie Thompson
- 2013: Thomas Lee, David Phelps, Janet Moore, Paul McEnroe, Tony Kennedy, Patrick Kennedy, Eric Wieffering
- 2014: Jim Yardley, Julfikar Ali Manik, Steven Greenhouse
- 2015: Gregory Zuckerman, Kirsten Grind
- 2016: David Benoit, Jacob Bunge, Dana Cimilluca, Dana Mattioli, Dennis K. Berman
- 2017: Zanny Minton Beddoes, Henry Tricks, Anton La Guardia, Chris Lockwood, Edward McBride
- 2018: Mike Isaac, Farhad Manjoo, Kevin Roose, Ashwin Seshagiri
- 2019: Eliot Brown, Scott Calvert, Peter Grant, Tawnell Hobbs, Katie Honan, Melissa Korn, Douglas MacMillan, Eric Morath, Keiko Morris, Shayndi Raice, Stephanie Stamm, Laura Stevens, Jimmy Vielkind, Lauren Weber
- 2020: Hadra Ahmed, Hannah Beech, Selam Gebrekidan, David Gelles, James Glanz, Thomas Kaplan, Natalie Kitroeff, Jack Nicas, Norimitsu Onishi, Dionne Searcey, Kenneth P. Vogel, Zach Wichter
- 2021: Dan McCrum, Olaf Storbeck, Stefania Palma, John Reed, Guy Chazan, Laurence Fletcher
- 2022: Juliet Chung, Gunjan Banerji, Julia-Ambra Verlaine, Caitlin McCabe, Akane Otani
- 2023: Angus Berwick, Luc Cohen, Lawrence Delevingne, Elizabeth Howcroft, Hannah Lang, Chris Prentice, Koh Gui Qing, Greg Roumelotis, Anirban Sen, Jasper Ward, Tom Wilson
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