Dale Willman (born 1956, Jamestown, New York, United States) is an American journalist. He is currently a program manager in the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, where he is developing a climate resilience fellowship for journalists. He returned in June 2016 from South Sudan, where he served as Lead Trainer and Civic Education Advisor for Internews. While there he worked with journalists at Radio Mayardit in Turalei, South Sudan.
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| - Dale Willman (born 1956, Jamestown, New York, United States) is an American journalist. He is currently a program manager in the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, where he is developing a climate resilience fellowship for journalists. He returned in June 2016 from South Sudan, where he served as Lead Trainer and Civic Education Advisor for Internews. While there he worked with journalists at Radio Mayardit in Turalei, South Sudan. (en)
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| - Dale Willman (born 1956, Jamestown, New York, United States) is an American journalist. He is currently a program manager in the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, where he is developing a climate resilience fellowship for journalists. He returned in June 2016 from South Sudan, where he served as Lead Trainer and Civic Education Advisor for Internews. While there he worked with journalists at Radio Mayardit in Turalei, South Sudan. In 2010-2011 Willman was a Fulbright Program grantee. He was the co-founder, co-publisher and managing editor of Saratoga Wire, a full-service on-line newspaper serving Saratoga Springs, New York until May 2014. Willman formerly produced podcasts for Slate.Com; and he has been an adjunct professor at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York. He worked for NPR (National Public Radio) for more than 10 years as a news anchor, reporter, producer and editor. He has also worked for CBS and CNN, and has anchored news for WCBS (AM) in New York and WTOP-FM (formerly WTOP-AM) in Washington, D.C. The focus of his Fulbright was noted British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace and Wallace's work in what is now Indonesia and Malaysia. Willman spent 10 months in Indonesia teaching journalism and researching Wallace, the most prominent naturalist of the 19th century. Wallace is considered the father of the scientific discipline now known as Biogeography. (en)
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