“I am a bad mother,” said Liana Mamatsashvili, a 37-year-old Georgian woman with a seven year old daughter. “I repeated those words on a daily...


IWPR builds the skills of professional and citizen journalists working in traditional media
and in social and new media.

IWPR supports the capacity of civil society and human rights groups to more effectively advocate for government and institutional accountability.

IWPR supports peace and reconciliation in conflict zones around the world.
EUROPE & EURASIA
Central Asian Bureau for Analytical Reporting cabar.asia
Caucasus Regional Journalists Network reporter.ge
Caucasus: Women Connecting for Peace women-peace.net
MENA
Syria Stories syriastories.net
MENA / LATIN AMERICA
2019 Aswat Horra (Free Voices) Project
IWPR in consortium with Reporters Without Borders and the Media Legal Defence Initiative will deliver the co-creation phase of the Aswat Horra (Free Voices) project with funding from the UK Government’s UK Aid Connect programme over nine months from May 2019 to January 2020. Aswat Horra will work in fragile countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), including Lebanon and Libya, to promote freedom of expression.
Deadline extended to: September 20, 2019.
Can an outsider get to the heart of a story as well as someone personally affected?

The dilemma foreign correspondents face is whether they can tell the truth as well as those who understand the lie of the land.
By Janine di Giovanni
"IWPR fills a critical gap by helping local journalists to focus on human rights and justice issues. In the process, it contributes to democratic transitions, and demonstrates that the best war reporting is not about military conflict, but human consequences."
Samantha Power
Former United States Ambassador to the United Nations; Pulitzer Prize-winning author
"IWPR produces fine reports from unstable parts of the world that are too often ignored by the mainstream media — reports that promote understanding in place of entrenched bigotry and prejudice."
Martin Fletcher
The Times
“I am a bad mother,” said Liana Mamatsashvili, a 37-year-old Georgian woman with a seven year old daughter. “I repeated those words on a daily...
“I am a bad mother,” said Liana Mamatsashvili, a 37-year-old Georgian woman with a seven year old daughter. “I repeated those words on a daily...