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Myanmar’s exiled media is fighting to survive a brutal funding crisis
From 2011 to 2021, media outlets were able to generate revenue. Since the coup, the country has plunged into civil war and independent journalism has been outlawed.
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Four Years After the Taliban’s Return, Zan Times Keeps Afghan Women’s Stories Alive
The outlet, now in its fourth year of operation, relies on journalists working under pseudonyms because of security threats inside Afghanistan.
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Exiled Journalists Flee Authoritarianism, But Not Its Reach
Investigative reporters and human rights experts warn that regimes are increasingly using surveillance, intimidation, criminal networks, and international institutions to pursue journalists beyond their borders.
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Authoritarian Convergence Is Global. For Exiled Journalists, Resistance Must Be Too
From Tehran to Moscow to Beijing, exiled journalists are finding ways to report under censorship, surveillance and exile.
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For Women Journalists in Exile, Reporting Is a Way to Resist Disappearance
Women journalists from Nicaragua, Russia and Myanmar discuss the gendered forms of violence that often accompany exile, and how they are fighting back.
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“We Refuse to Die”: Meduza on surviving Russia’s war on independent media
“Why haven’t we died again?” was the question Meduza’s editors posed at this year’s International Journalism Festival.
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Journalism in exile: reporting on a country you cannot return to
Three journalists who lived in different countries and spoke different languages found themselves in exile decades apart, for the same reason.
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Twenty years of Zamaneh Media: A legacy in exile
We celebrate the 20th anniversary of Zamaneh Media, a founding member of NEMO and an exiled newsroom serving audiences in Iran and diaspora communities worldwide.
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Exiled journalists urge Germany to safeguard independent media
Exiled journalists in Germany call on the government to take stronger action in defense of independent media and against disinformation.
