Stokely Baksh

Stokely Baksh

Reporter
baksh@american.edu

Stokely Baksh is a multimedia journalist based in Washington, D.C.

A recent graduate of Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, Baksh completed an investigative project called "The Business of Detention," which explores the profitable business of immigration detention, with her colleague Renee Feltz. The investigation won the Melvin Mencher Award for Superior Reporting and the James A. Wechsler Award for National Reporting. It was a finalist in the South by Southwest Interactive Web Awards. It was also the first investigative-new media project for Columbia.

Prior to graduate school, Baksh worked for the non-profit journalism organization the Center for Public Integrity, newswire United Press International under the technology and business desks, and Indymedia. At age 20, she went to Guyana, not to be mistaken for Ghana, where she researched death squads.

Also a graduate of American University, Baksh returned in the Fall of 2008 as a post-graduate fellow at American University's Investigative Reporting Workshop, where she will continue looking at immigration detention and transparency problems.

Education Background

Bachelor of Arts in Print Journalism with a concentration in Political Communications 2005 – American University, Washington, D.C.

Master's in New Media and Investigative Journalism 2008 – Columbia University, New York City

Stories to which Stokely Baksh has contributed

Incubating new economic models for journalism.

Latest from iLab

Citizen journalists work undercover in North Korea to show daily life

Japanese journalists have been training citizens in North Korea to take audio and video recordings of everyday life in an effort to document the hardships, including food shortages, prevalent there. Meet the man behind the training, Jiro Ishimaru.


 

Most Recent Posts

Who will fix your planes?

Among the many employees who may lose their jobs because of American Airlines' plans to restructure are those in maintenance, including 1,200 mechanics in Fort Worth. American was the last legacy carrier that did the bulk of its maintenance in-house. And as we found in our report last year, that shift to outsourcing maintenance has led to safety concerns.

Older workers face challenges in Silicon Valley

An advanced degree and experience in the tech sector should be a ticket to a job in today's economy. But older workers in the heart of the new economy, Silicon Valley, are finding their resume is not the issue. Aaron Glantz reports in The Bay Citizen.

 

 

Tennessee bank collapse largest since April 2010

The Friday failure of a bank in Tennessee is the costliest since April 30, 2010, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Michigan pursues wind energy with tax policy

Bryan Ritterby of Holland, Mich., was highlighted at last night's State of the Union speech as the picture of employment in new industry--wind turbine manufacturing. Now, property tax incentives are available for utility companies hoping to build on Michigan's growing renewable energy sector. Patrick Howard reports in the Great Lakes Echo.

Members of Congress urge investigation into sexual abuse in immigrant detention centers

Citing our October film Lost in Detention, 30 members of Congress are pressing the Government Accountability Office to look into the issue of sexual abuse at immigration detention centers.

Workshop Partners

Workshop Partners

We publish online and in print, often teaming up with other news organizations. We post quarterly updates to our BankTracker project, in which you can view the financial health of every bank and credit union in the country, with msnbc.com, and we co-publish stories in our What Went Wrong project with The Philadelphia Inquirer and New America Media. Learn more on our partners page.

America What Went Wrong

America What Went Wrong

Donald Barlett and James Steele are revisiting America: What Went Wrong, their landmark 1991 newspaper series, in a new project with the Investigative Reporting Workshop. Over the next year, the project team will examine how four decades of public policy has shaped America's ongoing economic crisis.