Participants in a Student Media Challenge event speak with each another

Impact Stories

News organizations around the world are transforming journalism — and their communities. See how a global network of news organizations and journalists uses solutions journalism to strengthen communities, advance equity, build trust, increase civic engagement, depolarize public discourse and discover new sources of revenue.

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Accountability
Balancing your diet, balancing the news
Balancing your diet, balancing the news
A solutions story about African food cooking camps that serve those with diabetes received high audience engagement on social media. In Uganda, diabetes is a common health condition that news usually portrays as a challenge. However, the story published on New Vision through a grant from Science Africa presented the disease in an alternative light, providing actionable insights that readers could implement. New Vision published across multimedia platforms, including print, website, Facebook, X and YouTube, to maximize reach and impact. It used text, videos, photos, graphics and audio to attract buy-in from different audiences. The strategy generated over 15,000 impressions on X, and the story was shared by the Allied Nutritionists’ Association, the Uganda Consumers Protection Association and Uganda Diabetes Association. Daniel Otunge of Science Africa says that when a different New Vision story was published, criticized for misrepresenting the biomedical causes of diabetes, “the food camp story was reposted on X and other platforms to provide a balanced perspective and highlight positive, solution-oriented interventions.” He added, “Their sharing and resharing amplified the reach of the story and the associated relevant community-based responses to the diabetes problem.”
Community engagement & action
The solutions series prompting new civic engagement
After The Salt Lake Tribune’s series on affordable housing, the newsroom built a working relationship with the Utah Housing Corporation (UHC), which is the state of Utah’s housing finance agency. The UHC originally reached out to The Tribune after this solutions story on housing in Millcreek was published. The Tribune will collaborate with the UHC on a new story updating people on the down payment assistance program for first-time homebuyers. Megan Banta, the data enterprise reporter at the Tribune, says, “I do think solutions journalism helped make the reporting process easier, especially when it came to talking to developers who often catch a lot of flak for the housing crisis.”
Dissemination
Building a solutions pipeline for interns
J.D. Long Garcia, an editor at America magazine and an accredited solutions journalism trainer, pitched the idea of having solutions journalism sessions as part of the onboarding of interns, and management accepted it. The magazine’s management took part in Long Garcia’s training and found a place for the practice among its new talent. America magazine has around six interns every year, ranging from students finishing college to professionals well into a career. Using the training he received from SJN, Long Garcia offers these interns a module that is optional but encouraged. Long Garcia said solutions journalism has changed the way he thinks about reporting — it “leads me to ask different questions as a journalist.” He added: “Frankly, it helps me take a more neutral stance. There is something quite unifying about a solutions-centered approach. Most people do want to solve problems. They just don't agree on how.”
Accountability
The solutions story that helped fund healthy, local food
A story by Rwandan journalist Annonciata Byukusenge prompted a funder of Village Kitchen, an initiative that addresses childhood malnutrition by training parents to prepare balanced meals with local food, to increase its financial support. Byukusenge shared the published story directly with Samson Desie, UNICEF Rwanda nutritionist, who was a source for the article. Desie, impressed with the finished story, told Byukusenge that UNICEF would increase its investment in Village Kitchen due to the evidence provided in the story’s reporting on the initiative’s beneficiaries, who spoke of Village Kitchen’s effectiveness at reducing malnutrition. Following this conversation, UNICEF and China announced their support for the Government of Rwanda to enhance early childhood development, which includes tackling malnutrition and stunting among children. Daniel Otunge of Science Africa, which published the story, says, “The main thing SoJo added to the reporting on the malnutrition in Rwanda was the unique response to the problem by the government and communities working together, rather than just focusing on the problem.”
Dissemination
Trust built and distributed through a ‘Solutionsphere’
Inspired by her Solutions Journalism Network (SJN) training, Duygu Uzunoglu, an accredited solutions journalism trainer in Turkey, spearheaded Solutionsphere, a mentorship program initiated through NewsLabTurkey. The 18-month initiative offers comprehensive workshops and mentorship in solutions and investigative journalism, partnering with six diverse media organizations (Seferi Keçi, Kısa Dalga, Muzır Neşriyat, Bursa Tanık, Evrensel, and Mesele Ekonomi). For many of these media partners, Solutionsphere represents an empowering introduction to solutions journalism, providing journalists with practical skills and renewed motivation in Turkey’s challenging media landscape. This collaboration highlights how institutional support and international training opportunities can foster meaningful journalistic impact and innovation. According to Uzunoglu, the news organizations find that “solutions journalism feels like a small but meaningful spark of hope and agency” in a country that has many challenges for journalists.
Dissemination
How solutions journalism reaches beyond journalism
3/2025
Chibuike Alagboso, who is director of media programs for Nigeria Health Watch as well as an accredited solutions journalism trainer and former SJN LEDE Fellow, has spread solutions journalism education and innovation outside of Nigeria through several international platforms and conferences. He has had papers accepted at multiple conferences, including the International AIDS Conference in Munich, Germany, where he pitched a SoJo-inspired photo exhibition; the Global Health Security Conference in Australia; and the Future of Family Planning Convening, hosted by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Washington, D.C. He also presented a SoJo-AI idea at the Africa Media Festival in Nairobi. Alagbaso says that solutions journalism insights and innovation should go beyond journalism: “[They] should be in conversations about agriculture, climate change, health security. We should be talking about how these issues are covered using the SoJo framework. That way, it can hopefully inform actions, practices and policies around those issues.”

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