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How Can Journalism Help Our Communities?

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

Sometimes things get very basic. My mother has been fighting for six years to deal with a house next door that has seems to have multiple building code violations and may be an illegal group home. (It is definitely a group home; whether or not is illegal depends on how many people are staying there, which is in question.) [Picture of house below.]

As a reporter who didn’t want to just focus on my own family’s needs — who wanted to remain impartial if not “objective” — I stayed out of the fray. And then, I just got tired of ignoring the needs of the community I had grown up in. So I am working on an article about the situation, and preparing to do a series of reports that may take video as well as text/photo form.

I owe an editor the first of my articles, so I won’t go on too much. However, I wanted to bring up this Wall Street Journal article on Detroit.

It’s a heavily documented, personal-story-focused narrative about black middle class flight from Detroit. There are elements of it that remind me of the situation in Baltimore, particularly the triage of enforcement. But it is also a different city with a different set of issues.

As I began discussing this story with folks on Twitter (which is where I got the link, via @danamo), a few questions came to mind:

1) How can journalism help make government more accountable for its decisionmaking about communities?

2) Do stories like this one over-personalize one citizen’s experience and create false generalities, or is the one-as-example-of-many mode the best way to tell the stories of evolving neighborhoods?

3) How do you deal with the emotional fallout of journalism? If you are living through the changes in your neighborhood or job situation, a story like this can produce a lot of emotional turbulence. How can journalism acknowledge this emotional resonance and prepare people to keep reading/viewing/responding despite the pain?

I’ll leave it there for now. All thoughts appreciated.

Light and Heat: Why We Should Wiki the Aiyana Jones shooting

Monday, May 17th, 2010

On Sunday just after midnight, seven year old Aiyana Jones was shot dead by Detroit police officers. The fact that officers did not intend to shoot her does not mean that this is not news. The volume and depth of coverage of the shooting is lacking… it’s building, but it’s still lacking.

You can find a mention of Aiyana Jones here — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detroit_Police_Department. That’s the only reference I could find to the case on Wikipedia, which has become a critical tool for aggregating information. Yes, it’s flawed, but so is journalism.

In order to shed more light than heat on this case, I would love to get some people to start a rational, factual Wikipedia page about the Aiyana Jones shooting, creating and/or linking to related (FACTUAL) content about topics including:

– relative amount of media attention given murders of or abductions of children of different races, and whether or not this shooting falls into a pattern of media attention
– statistics about use of force and the Detroit Police Department
– information about the suggestion that the raid in which Jones was killed was being filmed for reality television
– information about the use of “flash-bangs,” or stun grenades, which are alleged to have been used in this raid
– community and governmental response to this fatal shooting

In other words, I’m hoping we can use tools that have already been developed to collectively gather information, rather than just opining. And then, if you want to opine, you might have more information so that your opinions are grounded in facts.

Anyone in? I could create the basic page, but I am a Wikipedia novice and am hoping to combine forces with someone/groups of folks. Feel free to reply here.