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WHO'S WHO
- Meet the
icons in the field of Philippine communication.
Explore the creative genius of communication
educators, journalists, and other media experts. |
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| SHEILA
S. CORONEL |
| A
graduate of the University of the Philippines
and the London School of Economics and Political
Science, where she obtained a Master's degree
in Political Sociology, Sheila S. Coronel has
written various books on investigative journalism,
politics, media and the environment. A respected
author and editor, Sheila Coronel's articles on
these subjects have been published extensively
in both local and international newspapers and
magazines. |
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Despite an atmosphere
of political authoritarianism and suppression
of the mass media in the early 1980s, Sheila
Coronel started her career reporting on political
affairs for the "Philippine Panorama Magazine".
Even then, she displayed extraordinary courage
in writing about sensitive topics of the day,
unveiling unusual talent with the grit of a
true-blue journalist.
With the return of press freedom after the first
People Power Revolt at EDSA in 1986, Sheila
Coronel wrote special reports for "The
Manila Chronicle". Again, her articles,
written in lucid and engaging - always straightforward
- prose, showed a remarkable perceptiveness
that was heightened by exceptional eloquence.
As the country, and with it the Philippine press,
struggled under the weight of an economic downturn
in the late 1980s, Sheila Coronel bucked the
inclination to succumb to yellow journalism
- shallow but relatively well-paying - by organizing
the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism
(PCIJ). In the company of a few like-minded
and talented colleagues, the PCIJ under Sheila
Coronel's able stewardship conducted research
and wrote about socially relevant and politically
sensitive issues that very few newspapers or
magazines back then had the temerity to investigate,
much more publish on their own. By sourcing
its own funds, however, PCIJ was able to independently
produce and publish many of these special reports.
Most often than not, these materials produced
a backlash of lawsuits and threats, but at the
same time generated enough interest to prompt
concerned agencies, mainly private, to conduct
follow up studies and in the process, bring
the matter to the attention of a larger public.
In so doing, PCIJ thus gave birth to investigative
journalism in the Philippines. Indeed, for the
past eleven years, the PCIJ has become a veritable
source of the country's most reliable and incisive
studies on some of the most serious ills that
plague Philippine society.
Source: Search for Outstanding
Journalists 2001 (Souvenir Program)
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| WORKS
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