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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Dissemination
From fellowship to first solutions correspondent
Sentient, a nonprofit news outlet covering issues and solutions around factory farms, encouraged staff reporter Grace Hussain to apply for SJN’s 2024 Climate Fellowship. Through Grace’s training, Sentient aimed to bring more solutions journalism to its newsroom. After reporting some strong solutions stories, Grace enjoyed the approach to storytelling so much, she pitched a solutions position to the editor of Sentient. The editor approved, recognizing that a full-time solutions reporting role aligned with both Sentient’s needs and Grace’s values. Grace said, “I'm thrilled to have been awarded the fellowship and built new skills in solutions reporting — especially in regard to complicating the narrative and leveraging the framework to highlight the work being done by frontline communities.”
Audience engagement
An air conditioning solution on full blast
An article on local air conditioning mandates by Climate Solutions Fellow Ysabelle Kempe became one of the most-read stories of 2024 for Smart Cities Dive (SCD), with a few thousand page views. SCD shared the article in its Daily Dive newsletter and posted it on the website, as well as on LinkedIn and Facebook pages. Kempe says, “Our audience is local government leaders in the U.S., and I believe one of the reasons for this story’s popularity is that local leaders want to know what is working in other communities so they can apply the learnings to their jurisdictions.” The story was republished by the Public News Service and shared on X by NGOs and by DMV Climate Partners, which is a group of government partners (in the District of Columbia, Maryland and Northern Virginia). The local leaders in the story reached out to Kempe, commending her for the accurate reporting on the policies.
Accountability
The telemedicine story that spread — and improved — the practice

Philip Ngumu’s story on a telemedicine initiative in Makueni County was broadcast on the County FM’s affiliate station, one of the most listened-to stations in Eastern Kenya. After hearing it, Dr. Paul Musila, the County Executive Committee (CEC) member for health, told Ngumu the story helped his department better understand the telemedicine program’s impact and challenges. Crucially, it revealed weaknesses the county hadn't learned from its usual sources. Musila said the county is committed to training new doctors and nurses for the program and modifying services for remote areas — needs revealed by Ngumu’s story. Moreover, delegates from neighboring counties, Kitui and Machakos, heard about the program from County FM and Ngumu at a regional meeting, and plan to launch their own telemedicine initiatives to improve rural health care access. Daniel Otunge of Science Africa said that solutions journalism made an impact because the story showed “evidence that the response was working and benefiting real people.” He added: “Doctors and nurses faced tech challenges due to aging equipment and poor phone connectivity in some remote areas. These limitations triggered an immediate policy response from the government.”
LiCAS News, the Archdiocese of Bangkok’s English-language news outlet, where Peter Monthienvichienchai, Ph.D. serves as editorial director, has adopted solutions journalism to break down the distance between reporters and subjects. Monthienvichienchai learned about the solutions journalism approach from a 2021 journalism workshop hosted by SIGNIS, the World Catholic Association for Communication, and led by accredited trainer Kavita Chandran. LiCAS' practice was reinforced through the Catholic Media Conference in Baltimore in 2023, which had a session on faith-based solutions journalism. At the 2024 National Catholic Social Communications Convention in the Philippines, Monthienvichienchai, serving as the secretary general of SIGNIS, called for improved “communion” with people through genuine human connection. He identified solutions journalism as an important storytelling tool to meet this goal. Monthienvichienchai says solutions journalism “allows us to tell stories of sacrifice and dedication by missionaries around Asia without ‘preaching’ or writing PR releases.” He adds, “Most importantly, it makes the story useful beyond Catholic readership.” LiCAS News is featured in the Solutions Story Tracker, and distributes solutions reporting through its Spotlight series.
Career Development
SoJo from podcasting to the classroom
7/2024
Ethan Brown, founder and host of the award-winning climate comedy podcast “The Sweaty Penguin,” has been hired as the journalism program consultant at the University of Rhode Island’s Metcalf Institute. Ethan says: “My motivation to join Metcalf came in part from my experience co-facilitating the Train-the-Trainers sessions through SJN’s Climate Cohort in April 2024, and subsequently training The Deerfield Scroll on SoJo. I really enjoyed being able to have a larger impact than just my own work, helping other journalists cover climate solutions.” At Metcalf, he is leading the new Climate and Environmental Science Fellowship for Local Journalism, which includes a training in science-supported solutions journalism, drawing on insights he learned as a solutions journalism writer and SJN trainer.
Dissemination
The network of Peruvian journalists pursuing accountability and solutions
7/2024
Twenty journalists in Peru came together to form the Peruvian Solutions Journalism Network for Integrity (Red de Periodismo de Soluciones para la Integridad), with an initial focus on promoting investigations and debate on public contracts, which are regularly subject to corruption and other inefficiencies. The network’s first contribution was the publication of articles by its founding members, covering subjects such as citizen-led monitoring of progress of public works. The impulse for the creation of this new group came from Wilber Huacasi, a journalist at La República (a major legacy paper in Lima), who initially organized a countrywide online training that for approximately 60 Peruvian journalists, with the financial support of USAID, Peruvian foundation Gustavo Mohme Llona and the Jesuit university in Lima.

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