Journalism & Free Speech: The China Stories

February 24, 2023 - 10:00am to 4:00pm
Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall Auditorium, Room 114 See map
1 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511

Register Here

View full conference schedule here
 

Co-sponsored by: Asian American Cultural Center (AACC), Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), and The China Project

How should newsrooms support journalists facing political retaliation?
What does journalistic accountability truly mean for U.S. and global
newsrooms? On Friday, February 24, join us at Yale University in
discussion with renowned journalists on the ethics of reporting in and
on China and Hong Kong. 
 
10:00 - 12:00pm
Introduction: Reporting on China without Fear or Favor
Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief of The China Project
Opening Remarks: China’s Reach Beyond its Border
Arne Westad, Elihu Professor of History and Global Affairs at Yale
 
Panel 1: The Price of Reporting
with Vicky Xu, Tin Shui Yeung, & Muyi Xiao. Moderated by Jeremy Goldkorn
Journalists reporting on the Chinese government’s oppression often become targets of silencing campaigns themselves. The price of telling the truth is high: many journalists face state-led harassment, slandering and even death threats; others are forced to leave their homeland, yet the intimidation campaigns reach foreign shores. However, these brave reporters from Hong Kong and mainland China have pressed on. In this session, we will hear
personal stories from three speakers: Vicky Xu, known for her role in exposing the systematic forced Uyghur labor in China; Tin Shui Yeung, who documented protests and social movements in Hong Kong from 2014 to 2020; and Muyi Xiao, who has been following China’s surveillance and global propaganda campaign through visual investigations and digital forensics.
 
12:45 - 2:15pm
Panel 2: Storytelling, Ethics, and the Responsibility of Reporting China
with Yangyang Cheng, Muyi Xiao, & Zeyi Yang. Moderated by Jeremy Goldkorn
What kind of stories are told about China in the Anglophone press? Who is the audience of these stories and what
narratives have they reproduced? Is “seeking the truth” sufficient justification to pursue a story, and what are the
ethics and responsibilities of journalism in the face of political and personal risks? In this session, we will hear about
the power of narratives, the ethics of China reporting, and the responsibilities of journalism from three speakers:
Yangyang Cheng, writer and research scholar at Yale Law School; Muyi Xiao, visual investigation reporter for The New
York Times; and Zeyi Yang, China Tech reporter at MIT Technology Review.
 
2:30 - 4:00pm
Panel 3: Diaspora, Diversity, and Power Dynamics in the Global Newsroom
with Shirley Ka Lai Leung, Justine Yan, & Jin Ding. Moderated by Yangyang Cheng
When a repressive regime cracks down on journalism within its borders, some journalists continue to raise their voices
outside the borders. In this session, Shirley Ka Lai Leung, independent journalist and former reporter for Apple Daily
Hong Kong, will talk about the challenges and potentials of independent reporting and Hong Kong diaspora journalism. Justine Yan, audio producer for NPR, will discuss personal narrative, poetry, and audio storytelling as sites of possibility for disrupting the binary between Chinese and Chinese-American stories. Jin Ding, Chief of Staff at the Center for Public Integrity, will talk about the power dynamics in the journalism profession, and diversity in and beyond the global newsroom.