Skip to content Skip to navigation

Cambridge fellowship for Assamese journalist

National award winning Youth Assamese Journalist Amarjyoti Borah has been selected for the Wolfson Press Fellowship offered by Cambridge University, United Kingdom. The three month fellowship will start from April 19 and during the course of the fellowship the fellows will research on their selected subject areas.


Amarjyoti has already made a mark in the field of Environment Reporting. In 2007 he was adjudged the “Youth Environmental Journalist (print) of the Year” by the Forum of Environment Journalists at New Delhi. Again in 2008 he was among 15 Journalists from Asia, Europe and Africa who were selected for a scholarship to attend a two months advanced training on environment reporting at Berlin, Germany. The scholarship and training was offered by the International Institute of Journalism, Berlin.


The Wolfson Press Fellowship brings Journalists from various countries to Wolfson College, Cambridge University to research on a particular topic of interest to the Journalist. Amarjyoti will be researching on the issues of Climate Change and the Environment Refugees.


“My area of case study will be the impacts of Climate change on the Sundarbans in India and Bangladesh, and its impacts on the human population”, says Amarjyoti. “I will also be concentrating on issues of the rights of the people there, and the views of the international community and international organisations on these issues”, adds Amarjyoti.


Amarjyoti has been reporting for “Down to Earth”, a leading Environment and Science magazine and have covered many major issues related to the North. The coverage on the destruction of the heritage caves in the Jaintia hills in Meghalaya has been widely appreciated. Besides this, his coverage of the much neglected oil spill issue at Changpang in Nagaland along with exclusive interview of NSCH leaders on this issue have had major impacts. Amarjyoti has also reported extensively on the impacts of Climate Change on different aspects of human life. “The entire North East is reeling under severe impacts of climate change. The consequences could be devastating in the future”, says Amarjyoti.


Amarjyoti, who has several achievement to his name is a resident of Rukmini Nagar, Guwahati and is the younger son of Sri Hiren Borah and Nizara Bora.

Comments

Mowsam Hazarika's picture

Congratulation , Amar ! Keep it up.
Smrity/namrup's picture

Congratulation !!!!
Kabita Sharma's picture

Congrats....and best of luck

Pages

Add new comment

Other Contents by Author

In a bid to mend the fence over Langpih Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi meets his Meghalaya counterpart Dr Mukul Sangma in Dispur. Both the CMs are understood to have sticked to their guns. The meet is in progress. The centre has asked both Gogoi and Sangma to settle the row.
National Union of Journalists Assam chapter in association with Gramya Vikas Mancha has organized a media workshop on climate change and disaster risk reduction on June 6. The workshop will be held at Hotel Brahmaputra Ashok and begin at 10 am. Dr Arabinda Mishra, director of Earth Science and Climate Change Division, The Energy and Resources Institute...
There seems to be some respite for Guwahatians as the rainwaters are receding slowly. But the low laying areas of Lachit Nagar, Anil Nagar, Nabin Nagar are still under water and mud.
If Shillong is renowned for the Bob Dylan fest which is presently into its 38th year, Guwahati - the gateway city to the Northeast – may very well be regarded as the new “tribute capital” of the world. Thanks to a few noble souls, musicians and music lovers of the city have actually immortalised a number of legendary musicians from different parts of the globe. However, the buzzword in music circles, of late, is the tribute to the “iron man of metal” Ronnie James Dio on June 11 next. A pall of gloom seems to have got cast over the entire rock fraternity worldwide ever since news about Dio’s demise passed around. For Ronnie can very well be said to...
Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi and his counterpart Meghalaya Chief Minister Dr Mukul Sangma is going to meet on Saturday at 4:30pm at Assam Secretariat, Guwahati to discuss Langpih border issue.
Government is waiting for response from the ULFA for peace talk, said GK Pillai, Union Home Secretary. Pillai told this to reporters at a press conference on Thursday at Shillong.
The northeastern premier city of Guwahati has come under artificial flood following a heavy downpour that lashed the city for several hours on Thursday. The rainwaters in many parts of the city are refusing to recede on Friday. Photo: UB Photos
Frontline staff of Kokrajhar Wild Life Division were sensitised on various laws relevant for handling of forest and wildlife crimes and about preparation of arrest memo, forwarding report, offence report, FIR, seizure list, complaints petition in a day-long legal orientation programme organised on May 26 at Saraikhola Forest IB of Chakrasila Wild Life Sanctuary. The camp was jointly organised by Kokrajhar Wildlife Division, Bodoland Teritorial Council and AARANYAK, a society for biodiversity conservation, in presence of C Ramesh, the DFO. The legal-orientation camp was organised for Kokrajhar Wildlife Division for the first time. The resource person of the training programme was...
The sound that can melt hearts, the melody that can be felt within & the symphony that can bring a head bangers ball, in short this is what Farmaan can be defined as. Farmaan doesn’t have a constrained genre as all the members are having varied influences and musical inclination. It likes to do constant experiments with all kinds of music varying from classic rock...
The London Bihu Committee (LBC) held their annual Rongali Bihu celebration on Sunday, the 2nd May 2010 in dreadful weather conditions, that were typically British. Still, few people let that stand in their way from attending the event, which surpassed even last year’s grand success. The festival was particularly notable for its success in attracting a new wave of Assamese diaspora as well as the regulars who have been attending for years. The event remained at the same venue as last year in Hornchurch, East London. The hall is bigger and the facilities superior than any used in recent years. For the second consecutive year, the Committee were delighted that the venue was...