Caroline Tracey - Profile and Journalist Details
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Get connected with journalists todayCaroline Tracey
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Climate Justice Fellow, High Country News
Tucson
Beats
Biography
Caroline Eaton Tracey writes about art, literature, environment, and migration in the US Southwest, Mexico, and the borderlands between the two. She speaks and works in English, Spanish, and Russian. Currently, Caroline is the Climate Justice Fellow at the High Country News and an editor-at-large Zócalo Public Square. Her reporting appears in n+1, the Nation, the Guardian, Rest of World, and elsewhere, as well as in Spanish in Mexico’s Nexos. Her reportage about migrant death in South Texas won the 2019 Scoundrel Time/Summer Literary Seminars nonfiction contest. Caroline’s personal essays appear in the Kenyon Review Online, Full Stop, New South, and elsewhere. “A River Passes By Here” was runner-up in the 2020 Financial Times/Bodley Head essay contest and “The Ephemeral Forever” won Ruminate Magazine’s 2021 VanderMey Nonfiction Contest. Her art writing has appeared in Nexos, Variable West, SFMOMA’s Open Space, and Burlington Contemporary. Caroline holds a PhD in Geography from the University of California, Berkeley. She lives with her wife, Mexican architect and sculptor Mariana GJP, and their dog, Lázaro, between Tucson, Arizona and Mexico City.She is currently seeking representation for SALT LAKES, her manuscript of essays, as well as preparing a book proposal about the effects of US border and migration policy in Mexico.
There are no topics I am unwilling to cover.
Content
Company Info
High Country News
High Country News is a monthly independent magazine based in Paonia, Colorado, dedicated to covering environmental, social, and political issues in the Western United States. Founded in 1970 by Tom Bell, the magazine has evolved from its original name, Camping News Weekly, to become a respected source of conservation-minded reporting. The magazine publishes a wide range of articles and special reports, and it also syndicates stories to major national publications like The New York Times and Rolling Stone. High Country News features an Indigenous Affairs Desk, established in 2017, which enhances coverage of Native American issues. With a circulation of about 36,000 readers, the magazine has garnered recognition from notable figures and continues to attract an audience interested in Western environmental and social topics.
Paonia, Colorado, United States
+1 970-527-4898
Founded: 1970