Martine Turenne, recipient of the 2001 Michener-Deacon
Fellowship.
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The Montreal journalist won for a proposal to report the significance of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) on an underdeveloped region of Mexico by studying at a Mexican university and living in the heart of a NAFTA development project. After this experience she will be able to explain to her readers what Canada can learn from Mexico and how what is happening there directly affects Canadians.
Turenne has been a reporter at L’actualité since 1998. Before that she worked for Le Devoir, Radio-Canada, Réseau de l’Information, and CKAC -Télémedia.
The Michener-Deacon Fellowship is intended to allow the journalist four months of studies that promote the public interest and benefit the community while at the same time enhancing the journalist’s own competence. The fellowship is awarded annually, depending on merit.
There were 10 entries this year. Previous projects have included studies of the role of public
television news in an age of increasing competition and
globalization in communications, and Vancouver’s drug-abuse
problem.
Jodi White, Managing Director of
Sydney House, Ottawa (chair of the judging panel); former
journalists Shirley Sharzer of Ottawa and Claire Helman of Montreal,
and Clinton Archibald, Professor of Public Policy and Management,
University of Ottawa.