2004 Michener-Deacon Fellow [Click to Enlarge] |
Cecil Rosner is the recipient of the 2004 Michener-Deacon
Fellowship. He is bureau chief for CBC English Television News in
Manitoba and also senior producer for CBC News: Disclosure. The Fellowship was presented to him by Governor General Adrienne Clarkson
during the Michener Award night ceremony held at Government House in Ottawa, April 15, 2004.
Mr. Rosner has been a journalist for 29 years. At the Winnipeg Free
Press for 11 years, he covered several beats including city hall and
the law courts. He is co-author of 'When Justice Fails – the David Milgaard Story'.
During 15 years with the CBC, Mr Rosner has been senior producer and
executive producer for 24 Hours, the CBC Winnipeg investigative
unit. In 2000, he became bureau chief for CBC News: Canada Now. In
2001 he created and was the founding senior executive producer of
CBC News: Disclosure. He contributed to CBC News teams that won
Michener Awards in 1991 and 2000.
Mr. Rosner was awarded the Michener-Deacn Fellowship for his proposal to research a book about the
history
of investigative journalism in Canada, and the contemporary issues
surrounding the subject. “By drawing attention to the failures and
foibles of society, the investigative journalist plays a role in
prompting new laws, new policies, and new ways of assessing
individuals and institutions,” Mr Rosner wrote. “Sometimes this
is not to the liking of powerful interests.” In the same week that
the RCMP raided the home of an Ottawa Citizen journalist seeking
information about confidential sources, Justice Mary Lou Benotto
ruled in a landmark case that the tools of investigative journalism
are important to the functioning of a democratic society.
The Fellowship provides $22,500 for four months leave to carry out
the work described in the application.
Cecil Rosner Fellowship Report on
Investigative Journalism (submitted November 14, 2005)