Alex Stonehill is presenting the CLP's Water Wars project on on PBS's Foreign Exchange with Daljit Dhaliwal all this week. Click here for broadcasts in your area, or watch the video on YouTube right now. Video »
Join the CLP at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon Tuesday Nov. 25th from 7 to 9 p.m. for a presentation of Water Wars and panel discussion of water scarcity and conflict. More »
Visit the interactive Water Wars Web Portal, sponsored by the Pulitzer Center On Crisis Reporting.
Larry Johnson is the National/Foreign Editor of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. In his reporting and writing he has focused on trouble spots around the world that are not reported, under-reported or misreported. His work has appeared in national magazines and a wide variety of newspapers, and he has traveled in more than 35 countries. He has won numerous awards and fellowships, and lives in Seattle. Larry joined the CLP's board of directors in November 2008.
Nanette Francia-Cotter became Deputy Director of the NYCLU in June 2005. Before joining the NYCLU, Nanette was Director of Community Programs at the Food Bank for New York City where she was responsible for maintaining a strong connection between the Food Bank and its member agencies, ensuring the needs of the emergency feeding network were readily met. Prior to this, she was Director of Administration and Personnel, also at the Food Bank. In this capacity, Nanette provided administrative oversight on all personnel and office issues, and project management on organizational expansion and technology upgrades. She also served in a number of capacities at the Soros Foundation's Open Society Institute, including Deputy Director of the Central Eurasia Project, overseeing all program administration of five Soros national foundations in Central Eurasia. Nanette also was a volunteer with the pioneer group of the U.S. Peace Corps in Kazakhstan (former Soviet Union).
Nanette received a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Rutgers University with a double-minor in Spanish and Philosophy, and completed the core curriculum of the Masters of Public Administration Graduate Program from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs.
John Tarleton is a writer, editor and organizer for The Indypendent. He has helped guide The Indypendent as it garnered more IPA awards for excellence in community journalism, than any other paper in the city each of the past four years. He also built the paper’s citywide distribution network. Since 2001, he has assisted with the initial development of El Independiente, Riseup Radio (WBAI—99.5 FM’s youth activism show) and Indy Kids as well as Indymedia newspapers in San Francisco, Boston and Binghamton, N.Y. and founded The Indypendent’s Community Reporting Workshop Series which has trained nearly 300 citizen journalists.
Tarleton is a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism. A pioneer in online citizens journalism, he launched cybertraveler.org and johntarleton.net in 1994. Reporting from the remotest parts of El Salvador, Chiapas and Oaxaca to the back alleys of Morocco to the Battle of Seattle to September 11th, he steadily built an audience of thousands as he hitchhiked 75,000 miles in 17 countries while surviving on money he made as a migrant farm worker and tree planter.
Eamon Aloyo is co-organizer of D.R.E.A.M. Ride, a fundraising bike race with six humanitarian aid nonprofits as beneficiaries. Eamon is a Ph.D. candidate in political science at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and his passions are international ethics and development, as well as political philosophy and other disciplines. He received his B.A. and M.A. from Lehigh University (PA), and has worked and studied in Kenya and Argentina. His time in Kenya was especially influential in his inspiration to participate in fundraising and organizing for development.
Eroyn Franklin is an artist, curator and co-founder of artist cooperatives S.S. Marie Antoinette and Sublevelthree in Seattle, Washington. Her recent artistic works currently draw from very personal narrative and conceptual themes. Eroyn is very interested in the intersections between personal narratives and larger political conditions and ideologies. Her work is portrayed in the socially relevant and cutting-edge mediums of comic books and cut paper 2d sculpturing. An experienced international photojournalist, Eroyn has strong interest in the values of Common Language Project beyond the abstract. Trained as a fine artist with a degree in photography from University of Washington, Eroyn plays a role in overall design elements for CLP.
Joel Dodge is currently a Ph.D candidate in mathematics at University of California - San Diego. He received his undergraduate degree in Math with minor in Media Studies from Hunter College in New York City.