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Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting
Former American journalism award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting was presented from 1991 to 2006 for a distinguished example of beat reporting characterized by sustained and knowledgeable coverage of a particular subject or activity.
From 1985 to 1990 it was known as the Pulitzer Prize for Specialized Reporting.
For 2007, the category was dropped in favor of a Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, with the Pulitzer Prize Board noting that "the work of beat reporters remains eligible for entry in a wide range of categories that include—depending on the specialty involved—national, investigative, and explanatory reporting, as well as the new local category."[1]
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Pulitzer Prize for Specialized Reporting
More information Year, Name(s) ...
Year | Name(s) | Publication | Rationale |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Jackie Crosby | The Telegraph | "for their in-depth examination of academics and athletics at the University of Georgia and the Georgia Institute of Technology." |
Randall Savage | |||
Mike Klingaman | The Baltimore Sun | "for a series on the effects of alcohol abuse by high school athletes." | |
Gary S. Rosenblatt | Baltimore Jewish Times | "for his analysis of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles and other Jewish concerns." | |
1986 | Mary Pat Flaherty | The Pittsburgh Press | "for their investigation of violations and failures in the organ transplantation system in the United States." |
Andrew Schneider | |||
Bruce Buursma | Chicago Tribune | "for his informed and clear reporting on religion, which included articles on Billy Graham, Pope John Paul II, born again believers and the Catholic Church in Africa." | |
William K. Robertson | Miami Herald | "for his literary-journalistic account of rediscovering Mark Twain's Mississippi River in honor of the 100th anniversary of Huckleberry Finn." | |
1987 | Alex Jones | The New York Times | "for 'The Fall of the House of Bingham,' a skillful and sensitive report of a powerful newspaper family's bickering and how it led to the sale of a famed media empire." |
Angelo Cataldi | The Philadelphia Inquirer | "for articles that profiled the Philadelphia Eagles football team's 1986 season under new head coach Buddy Ryan." | |
Irene Wielawski | The Providence Journal | "for medical reporting that consistently examined the human side of complex health care issues." | |
1988 | Walt Bogdanich | The Wall Street Journal | "for his chilling series of reports on faulty testing by American medical laboratories." |
Natalie Fobes | The Seattle Times | "for stories and photographs portraying the Pacific salmon's struggle to survive man-made hazards." | |
Staff | Lexington Herald-Leader | "for its report on the rise and fall of Spendthrift Farm, the famed Kentucky horse breeders." | |
1989 | Edward Humes | The Orange County Register | "for his in-depth reporting on the military establishment in Southern California." |
Dennis Anderson | St. Paul Pioneer Press | "for his stories detailing the problems and abuses that endanger America's waterfowl." | |
Chuck Cook | The Arizona Republic | "for their stories about risks to elderly Americans from prescription errors, drug interactions and medication abuse." | |
Mike Masterson | |||
1990 | Tamar Stieber | Albuquerque Journal | "for persistent reporting that linked a rare blood disorder to an over-the-counter dietary supplement, L-Tryptophan, and led to a national recall of the product." |
Jim Dwyer | Newsday | "for his coverage of the New York City Subway system." | |
Claire Spiegel | Los Angeles Times | "for an investigation of mismanagement and abuses at a Los Angeles medical center, stories that led to improvements in patient care and policies at the hospital." |
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Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting
More information Year, Name(s) ...
Year | Name(s) | Publication | Rationale |
---|---|---|---|
1991 | Natalie Angier | The New York Times | "for her compelling and illuminating reports on a variety of scientific topics." |
Scott Harper | The Capital | "for reporting that uncovered hazing, sexual harassment and generally biased treatment of female cadets at the U.S. Naval Academy and prompted six congressional and naval investigations." | |
David Shaw | Los Angeles Times | "for reporting on media coverage of a variety of public issues." | |
1992 | Deborah Blum | The Sacramento Bee | "for her series, 'The Monkey Wars,' which explored the complex ethical and moral questions surrounding primate research." |
Russ Conway | The Eagle-Tribune | "for his reporting about questionable business practices in professional hockey." | |
Gregg Jones | Arkansas Gazette | "for stories about the state's faltering rural health-care system." | |
1993 | Paul Ingrassia | The Wall Street Journal | "for often exclusive coverage of General Motors' management turmoil." |
Joseph B. White | |||
Jesse Katz | Los Angeles Times | "for a series of portraits and analyses that illuminated the causes and effects of Los Angeles gang life." | |
Fawn Vrazo | The Philadelphia Inquirer | "for her comprehensive coverage of women's health issues." | |
1994 | Eric Freedman | The Detroit News | "for dogged reporting that disclosed flagrant spending abuses at Michigan's House Fiscal Agency." |
Jim Mitzelfeld | |||
Joan Connell | Newhouse News Service | "for her reporting and writing on religion, ethics and morality." | |
John Woestendiek | The Philadelphia Inquirer | "for his coverage of the promise and perils of city youth." | |
1995 | David Shribman | The Boston Globe | "for his analytical reporting on Washington developments and the national scene." |
Michael J. Berens | The Columbus Dispatch | "for a series revealing inequities in the county municipal court system, including the widespread jailing of individuals too poor to pay fines for minor offenses and the release of other, more serious offenders who were able to pay." | |
Jason DeParle | The New York Times | "for Washington D.C. welfare and social policy coverage that focused on the condition of the poor and Federal Government actions affecting them." | |
Tom Hallman Jr. | The Oregonian | "for the series 'Extreme Indifference,' on the prosecution of a drunken driver convicted of killing four pedestrians, and for his reporting on public safety." | |
1996 | Bob Keeler | Newsday | "for his detailed portrait of a progressive local Catholic parish and its parishioners." |
Jenni Bergal | Sun Sentinel | "for disclosing problems and abuses in the state's tax-funded Medicaid health maintenance organizations." | |
Fred Schulte | |||
Alison Grant | The Plain Dealer | "for articles uncovering corrupt dealings between contractors and city officials in the suburb of Beachwood that resulted in indictments and significant reforms." | |
1997 | Byron Acohido | The Seattle Times | "for his coverage of the aerospace industry, notably an exhaustive investigation of rudder control problems on the Boeing 737, which contributed to new FAA requirements for major improvements." |
Celia W. Dugger | The New York Times | "for her coverage of the plight of a young African woman who was jailed by U.S. immigration officials after she fled her homeland and its tribal rite of genital mutilation to seek asylum in the country, which prompted worldwide reaction." | |
Craig Flournoy | The Dallas Morning News | "for his coverage of low-income housing programs, including the disclosure that Dallas officials had misspent or failed to utilize millions of federal dollars allocated for impoverished areas." | |
1998 | Linda Greenhouse | The New York Times | "for her consistently illuminating coverage of the United States Supreme Court." |
Keith Bradsher | The New York Times | "for his reporting that disclosed safety and environmental problems posed by sport utility vehicles and other light trucks." | |
Jason DeParle | The New York Times | "for his coverage of the successes and frustrations of the national effort to reform welfare." | |
Laurie Garrett | Newsday | "for her reporting on the public health care crisis in the countries of the former Soviet Union." | |
1999 | Michael Hiltzik | Los Angeles Times | "for their stories on corruption in the entertainment industry, including a charity sham sponsored by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, illegal detoxification programs for wealthy celebrities, and a resurgence of radio payola." |
Chuck Philips | |||
Barton Gellman | The Washington Post | "for his penetrating coverage of the inner workings of the United Nations Special Commission as it sought to impact and disarm Iraqi weapons." | |
Blair Kamin | Chicago Tribune | "for his lucid coverage of city architecture, including an influential series supporting the development of Chicago's lakefront area."[a] | |
2000 | George Dohrmann | St. Paul Pioneer Press | "for his determined reporting, despite negative reader reaction, that revealed academic fraud in the men's basketball program at the University of Minnesota." |
David Cay Johnston | The New York Times | "for his lucid coverage of problems resulting from the reorganization of the Internal Revenue Service." | |
Robert O'Harrow | The Washington Post | "for his innovative stories on threats to personal privacy in the digital age." | |
2001 | David Cay Johnston | The New York Times | "for his penetrating and enterprising reporting that exposed loopholes and inequities in the U.S. tax code, which was instrumental in bringing about reforms." |
Virginia Ellis | Los Angeles Times | "for her persistent reporting that exposed extensive financial improprieties by a state insurance commissioner, who later resigned." | |
Rebecca Smith | The Wall Street Journal | "for her prescient and knowledgeable reporting on the electricity shortage faced by the U.S., and the country's failed efforts to deregulate energy." | |
2002 | Gretchen Morgenson | The New York Times | "for her trenchant and incisive Wall Street coverage." |
Patrick Healy | The Boston Globe | "for his reporting on education, including a compassionate examination of student suicides at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and revelations of grade inflation at Harvard University, coverage that spawned reforms." | |
2003 | Cameron W. Barr | The Christian Science Monitor | "for the extraordinary clarity, diversity and context in his ongoing coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict." |
Patrick Healy | The Boston Globe | "for his reporting on education, including a compassionate examination of student suicides at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and revelations of grade inflation at Harvard University, coverage that spawned reforms." | |
David Cay Johnston | The New York Times | "for his stories that displayed exquisite command of complicated U.S. tax laws and of how corporations and individuals twist them to their advantage." | |
2004 | Daniel Golden | The Wall Street Journal | "for his compelling and meticulously documented stories on admission preferences given to the children of alumni and donors at American universities." |
Ellen Barry | The Boston Globe | "for her fresh, thoroughly reported and powerfully written stories about neglected people with mental health problems in Massachusetts." | |
Barton Gellman | The Washington Post | "for his authoritative and provocative coverage of the search for forbidden weapons in Iraq." | |
2005 | Amy Dockser Marcus | The Wall Street Journal | "for her masterly stories about patients, families and physicians that illuminated the often unseen world of cancer survivors." |
Ron Brownstein | Los Angeles Times | "for the clarity, consistency and quality of his political reporting during a presidential election year." | |
Dana Priest | The Washington Post | "for her determined, deeply sourced and insightful coverage of United States intelligence operations." | |
2006 | Dana Priest | The Washington Post | "for her persistent, painstaking reports on secret 'black site' prisons and other controversial features of the government's counterterrorism campaign." |
Barry Meier | The New York Times | "for his original, strongly documented stories on a flawed heart-defibrillator that imperiled the safety of unwitting patients." | |
Jerry Mitchell | The Clarion-Ledger | "for his relentless and masterly stories on the successful prosecution of a man accused of orchestrating the killing of three civil rights workers in 1964." |
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Notes
- Moved by the Pulitzer board from the Criticism category.
References
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