Journalist in Residence

The Center for Journalism Ethics provides an international hub for the examination of the role of professional and personal ethics in the pursuit of fair, accurate and principled journalism. Our Journalist in Residence program brings nationally renowned journalists to campus to promote engagement with UW-Madison students and the public. For information on all of the journalist in residence programs at UW–Madison, please visit this website.

Program Contact

Kathleen Bartzen Culver, Director
Center for Journalism Ethics
ethics@journalism.wisc.edu
608-575-4082

2024 Journalist in Residence

Headshot, Jonathan Martin

Jonathan Martin is the politics bureau chief and senior political columnist at POLITICO, where he writes a reported column. Prior to starting his column in 2022, Martin was the national political correspondent for The New York Times. Covering elections in all 50 states, he served as the publication’s top political reporter for nearly a decade. He is the co-author of the New York Times best-seller This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America’s Future, which gave readers in-the-room access to the extraordinary events of the 2020 election and its aftermath.  Martin regularly provides on-air political analysis for ABC, NBC and CBS.  He and his wife, Betsy, live in Washington and New Orleans.

 

Former Journalists in Residence

Headshot, Aneri Pattani

2023

Aneri Pattani is a senior correspondent with KFF Health News, a national nonprofit outlet covering U.S. health care and health policy. She focuses on mental health and substance use issues, and is currently reporting a year-long series on how state and local governments use – or misuse – more than $50 billion in opioid settlement cash. Pattani’s work spans text and audio stories, and she has been heard on NPR and Science Friday. Her stories have received national recognition, including a 2021 award from the Institute for Nonprofit News for reporting on the flawed oversight of addiction treatment facilities in Pennsylvania. She was a 2019 recipient of the Rosalynn Carter Fellowship for Mental Health Journalism. Pattani is currently pursuing her masters’ in public health as a Bloomberg fellow at Johns Hopkins University. As part of that program, she helped create a free, online course to teach journalists how to responsibly report on the topic of suicide.

2022

Pete Williams covered the US Supreme Court and the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security for NBC News for 29 years. Among the stories he covered were the Oklahoma City, Olympic Park, and Boston Marathon bombings as well as the federal government’s massive investigation following the 9/11 terror hijackings. The Atlantic called him the “media hero of the Boston bombing coverage” for his “clear, careful, accurate reporting in a sea of media confusion.”

He is the recipient of four national news Emmy awards as well as two Edward R. Murrow Awards and the John F. Hogan Award from the Radio Television Digital News Association.

Prior to joining NBC News, Williams was an aide in the US Senate and House. In 1986 he joined the staff of then-Congressman Dick Cheney as press secretary and a legislative assistant. In 1989, when Cheney became Secretary of Defense, Williams was confirmed by the Senate as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs.

2021

Keri Blakinger is a Texas-based investigative reporter for The Marshall Project, a nonprofit newsroom focused on criminal justice. She is the organization’s first formerly incarcerated reporter and in addition to covering incarceration and capital punishment, she writes a regular column published in collaboration with NBC News. She was a Hearst Fellowship recipient in 2016 and her reporting has helped earn a National Magazine Award and recognition as a Pulitzer Prize finalist. Her work has led to major changes in medical care in Texas prisons, spurred the creation of a book club in the Harris County jail and sparked the creation of a law better protecting families from the wrongful removal of children by welfare agencies. Her memoir, Corrections in Ink, was published in June 2022.

2020

Wesley Lowery is a correspondent for CBS News, a contributing editor at The Marshall Project, and the author of They Can’t Kill Us All: Ferguson, Baltimore, and a New Era in America’s Racial Justice Movement. Prior to joining CBS News, he was a national correspondent for the Washington Post, where he primarily covered issues of race and justice. He has twice been a member of teams awarded the Pulitzer Prize, and his work has appeared in the Boston Globe, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Atlantic and Sports Illustrated and GQ Magazine.

2019

Caitlin Dickerson is a staff writer at The Atlantic. Previously, she was a national immigration reporter for The New York Times where she broke news about the Trump administration’s family separation policy, immigrant arrests and deportations, asylum practices and health and safety standards inside immigration detention centers. She is the recipient of Peabody and Edward R. Murrow awards for her investigative reporting and is a three-time finalist for the Livingston Award.

2018

David Folkenflik is the New York City-based media correspondent for NPR News and the host and editor of On Point from NPR and WBUR (with Meghna Chakrabarti). His stories and analyses are broadcast on the network’s news magazines, such as All Things Considered, Morning Edition, and Here & Now, and are featured on NPR’s website and mobile platforms. Folkenflik’s reporting casts light on the stories of our age, the figures who shape journalism and the tectonic shifts affecting the news industry. He has reported on the relationship between the press, politicians and the general public as well as the fight over the flow of information in the age of Trump. Folkenflik joined NPR in 2004 after more than a decade at the Baltimore Sun, where he covered higher education, national politics and the media. He is author of Murdoch’s World: The Last of the Old Media Empires and editor of Page One: Inside the New York Times and the Future of Journalism.

2017

Sarah Kliff is one of the country’s leading health policy journalists, who has spent seven years chronicling Washington’s battle over the Affordable Care Act. Her reporting has taken her to the White House for a wide-ranging interview with President Obama on the health law and to rural Kentucky, for a widely-read story about why Obamacare enrollees voted for Donald Trump. Prior to joining Vox, Kliff covered health policy for the Washington Post. She has also covered health policy for Politico and Newsweek magazine.

2016

Molly Ball is National Political Correspondent for TIME where she writes columns, features and contributes video journalism. Previously she was a staff writer for The Atlantic, where she covered national politics. Before joining the Atlantic, Molly reported for Politico, the Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Las Vegas Sun. From 2001 to 2003, she was a reporter for the Cambodia Daily. She is a recipient of numerous awards for her journalism, including the Toner Prize for Excellence in Political Reporting, the Society of Professional Journalists’ Sigma Delta Chi Award, the Sandy Hume Memorial Award for Excellence in Political Journalism, and the Lee Walczak Award for Political Analysis.