James Glanz
American journalist / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Glanz is an American journalist who was appointed as Baghdad bureau chief of The New York Times[1] in 2007.
James Glanz | |
---|---|
Status | Married |
Occupation | journalist |
Notable credit | The New York Times |
Glanz joined the Times in 1999.[2] Articles he wrote with Eric Lipton and others on the World Trade Center were chosen as a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in explanatory journalism in 2002. Articles Lipton and Glanz wrote were also a part of the Nation Challenged package that won a Pulitzer for Public Service in 2002. He received three Gerald Loeb Awards – the 2020 Breaking News award for "Crash in Ethiopia,"[3] and two consecutive Visual Storytelling awards, first in 2021 for "Visualizing the Pandemic Economy"[4] and again in 2022 for "Why the Mexico City Metro Collapsed".[5][6]
Glanz has a Ph.D. in astrophysical sciences from Princeton University.