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Journalism Fellows

The Bill Lane Center will begin accepting applications for its 2025 Western Media Fellowship

Hands of journalists scribble in reporters' notebooks

 

Stanford University’s Bill Lane Center for the American West has supported journalism about the West and its environment for more than a decade. We’re soliciting a new round of applications for our Western Media Fellowship, offering a $7,500 stipend for three to six months’ work. The stipend underwrites a journalist illuminating crucial issues about the region.

As of September 9, 2024, we will accept applications for an award to be made in November. The deadline for applications is October 14, 2024. Incorporating a plan to work with Stanford-based experts is not a requirement but will ensure an application gets extra attention. In addition to a description of the proposed project, please include a brief resume and show you have ties to a news organization or other outlet through which the work would be distributed. Ideally, publication would happen in April of 2025, but no later than August of 2025.

Our criteria: 

  • The work should examine a crucial aspect of the West, its land, its people, its history, and the impact of the forces that power its economies
  • The applicant should have ties to a news organization which will guarantee serious consideration of publishing the work; the Bill Lane Center is not responsible for securing publication
  • Publication should happen within six to nine months of the award, or by August 11, 2025
  • The work itself could be one or could be any combination of the following: print or online articles, photography or photo essays, informational graphics, podcasts, video journalism, documentary films, fact-based graphic novels or graphic documentaries.

Publications by past fellows have focused on a wide range of subjects, from Brandon Kapelow's 2024 piece on high rates of suicide in rural Alaska, to Janet Wilson's 2023 investigation of the 20 California farming families who use more Colorado River water than some states. Our journalists have produced radio stories on NPR's Morning Edition, articles in the New York Times, reporting for Arctic Today, special issues of literary magazines, and investigations in other national and western publications.

To be considered for the fellowship, applicants should send a description of their proposed project and the other materials listed above to Felicity Barringer, writer in residence at the Bill Lane Center for the American West: febarr [at] stanford.edu (subject: Web%20inquiry%20about%20BLC%20Media%20Fellowships) (febarr[at]stanford[dot]edu)

Recent Center News

Rollback of protections for roadless areas ignites debate over wildfire management; new concept for managing Colorado River flows proposed amid dwindling reservoirs; domestic policy package threatens Native American and Indigenous communities; agrivoltaics meet resistance from farmers and utilities in Arizona, and more environmental news from around the West.

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Since its founding two decades ago, the Bill Lane Center has become a thriving community of students and researchers who examine the American West in all its complexities.
In 2021, we interviewed Buzz Thompson about a newly-launched California water market, seen primarily as a tool to help farmers hedge against water price increases. Now, Thompson has co-authored a study proposing an "environmental" water market with both economic and ecological value.