Neha Dixit
Neha Dixit is an Indian journalist and author. She is best known for her long, in-depth investigative work on politics, social justice and gender in South Asia. She has received over a dozen national and international awards in journalism for her groundbreaking, hard hitting reports.
Neha Dixit | |
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Dixit in 2019 | |
Education | Miranda House, Delhi Jamia Millia Islamia |
Occupation | Journalist[1][2][3] |
Early life
She attended school in Lucknow, and graduated in English Literature from Miranda House, University of Delhi. Thereafter, she pursued a Masters in Convergent Journalism from the AJK Mass Communication Research Centre, Jamia Milia Islamia in New Delhi. She has been a fellow at the World Press Institute and Knight Centre.
Career
She has worked as an investigative journalist for over 13 years across multiple mediums including Print, Television and Online. She began her career as an investigative journalist with Tehelka magazine.[4] Dixit later joined the Special Investigation team of the news channel Headlines Today now known as India Today. She is also a member of the Network of Women in Media in India.[5]
Since 2013, she has been working as an independent journalist[6] Al Jazeera, Outlook magazine, Smithsonian magazine, Foreign Policy, The Caravan, The New York Times's "India Ink" blog, Himal Southasian, The Wire, Washington Post and several other national and international publications.
She teaches at NALSAR, Symbiosis, Jamia University, and Ashoka University. She has also delivered several lectures on journalism and intersections with politics and social justice at various universities including NYU, Göttingen and Columbia School of Journalism.
Dixit has spoken about the issues of sexism, labor rights violations and the corporate-political nexus in the mainstream Indian media.[7] She regularly faces rape and death threats, physical attacks and vicious online trolling for writing against sectarian politics, using a gender lens and for reporting on tribals, Muslims and socio-economically marginalized sections of the society.[8]
Dixit's reports have often had a national and international impact. In January 2019, the Office of the High Commissioner for United Nations Human Rights wrote to the Indian government taking cognizance of her in-depth investigation on the extrajudicial killings of poor Muslims in Uttar Pradesh by the state police. She was also the first journalist to uncover documentary evidence revealing how right-wing religious fundamentalists, RSS, in India were regularly trafficking tribal girls to ideologically brainwash them. After her report, several girls were rehabilitated with their families. It was also her report on illegal clinical trials in India that revealed how the poor as being used as guinea pigs by multinational pharmaceutical companies. She also broke the story on how women from religious minorities faced sexual violence and mass rapes during the Muzaffarnagar sectarian violence in 2013.
Dixit and her family have been subjected to life and rape threats after her investigations. Despite physical attacks and online abuse, she continues to report ground breaking stories. She is also facing criminal legal cases for her path-breaking investigative work. Committee for Protection of Journalists and several International Press Freedom Bodies have spoken up in her support and applauded her work.
Books
Dixit contributed to The Global Casebook of Investigative Journalism 2012.[9] Her chapter was on the honour killing diktats issued and executed by kangaroo courts known as Khap Panchayats in North India.
In 2016, Dixit was one of the first Indian journalists to use a graphic format for reportage. She contributed a story "The Girl Not from Madras" to the comic book anthology 'First Hand: Graphic Non-fiction from India', about exploitation of women in India.[10][11] The illustrations were done by well known graphic artist Orijit Sen.
In the second volume of the same book, her story 'Shadow Lines', on seven women who survived mass rapes during the sectarian violence in Muzaffarnagar riots in 2013, was illustrated by Priya Kuriyan.[12]
Dixit contributed a chapter on Sexual violence during sectarian violence in India to Breaching the Citadel, an anthology of sexual violence in South Asia 2016 by Zubaan Books.[13]
Her essay on difficulties interfaith or self choice marriages in India and the trials and tribulations of civil marriage in India was part of the 2018 book 'Knot for Keeps: Writing the Modern Marriage' by Harper Collins.[14]
She also contributed an essay 'Outcast(e)/Outlawed: The Bandit Queen (1996)' in the book 'Bad' Women of Bombay Films'published by Palgrave. It looks is a deep dive into Phoolan Devi's life and how it was represented in the film 'Bandit Queen.'
Awards
Dixit has won over a dozen national and international awards for her journalism.
In 2019, she was awarded the CPJ International Press Freedom Award by the Committee to Protect Journalists.
In 2017, she won the Chameli Devi Jain Award for Outstanding Woman Journalist for 2016, the highest award for women journalists in India.[15]
In 2015, she won the Press Institute of India-Red Cross award for her story "Shadow Lines" on mass rapes of women in the sectarian violence of North India's Muzaffarnagar.[16][17]
The other awards include Trust Women Honorary Journalist award by Thomson Reuters Foundation,[18] Young Journalist Award by Thomson Foundation, Lorenzo Natali Award by the European Commission 2011,[19] Best Television Reporter, News Television Awards,[20] UNFPA Laadli Award,[21] Anupama Jayaraman Award.[22] She has also won the Kurt Schork award for investigative journalism,[23] and has been a World Press Institute fellow.
References
- Ullekh NP (26 January 2015). War Room: The People, Tactics and Technology behind Narendra Modi's 2014 Win. Roli Books Private Limited. p. 33. ISBN 978-93-5194-068-5.
- "Selective amnesia". The Hindu.
- "Modi’s Scandals: a Delhi Diary". Counter Punch. 16 July 2015 by Vijay Prashad
- "Blood for sale: India's illegal 'red market'". BBC News, By Anu Anand Delhi. 27 January 2015
- "Newsmagazine’s Handling of Sex Harassment Complaint Draws Criticism". New York Times: India Ink, By Nida Najar 21 November 2013
- "Two Girls in a Tree: Why the Indian Rape Photos Are Inexcusable". Huffington Post, 4 August 2014. by Sandip Roy.
- "Journalist Neha Dixit Spills The Beans On The Shocking Realities Of Women Journalists In India". Youth Ki Awaaz. 3 September 2014. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- "How Threats on Twitter Manifest In Real Life: Indian Troll Tales". Quint. Quint. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
- "The global investigative journalism casebook". www.unesco.org. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
- "Comic book sheds light on untold stories of trafficking, poverty and prejudice in India". Reuters, 10 June 2016. By Anuradha Nagaraj. vis Euronews.
- "One-of-a-kind graphic anthology on contemporary India". Kanika Sharma, Hindustan Times 16 May 2016
- "Muzaffarnagar riots: This graphic narrative tells the story of the courage of seven rape survivors". Scroll. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
- "Zubaan- Feminist Independent Publishing". Retrieved 10 April 2019.
- "Knot For Keeps: Writing the Modern Marriage". Harper Collins. Harper Collins.
- Staff, The Wire. "Neha Dixit Wins Chameli Devi Award for Outstanding Woman Journalist for 2016". thewire.in. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- "Neha Dixit wins Red Cross award for writing on women raped during 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots". TwoCircles, 1 December 2015
- "KL Former Journalist Shazia Yousuf Wins ICRC-PII Award". Kashmir Life, 2 December 2015
- "Winners of the Trust Women Awards". Thomson Reuters Foundation, Mon, 9 December 2013
- "Premio Lorenzo Natali – Analisi approfondite dei migliori broker sul mercato". Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- "Headlines Today bags 7 National Television Awards". India Today
- "UNFPA Laadli media awards declared". Zee News
- Pradip Ninan Thomas (31 March 2011). Negotiating Communication Rights: Case Studies from India. SAGE Publications. pp. 158–. ISBN 978-81-321-0778-1.
- "No country for women". TheHindu, 8 March 2015. Vidya Venkat