Maria Ines Zamudio - Profile and Journalist Details
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Get connected with journalists todayMaria Ines Zamudio
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Investigative Journalist, Invisible Institute
Chicago
Beats
Biography
Zamudio is an award-winning investigative reporter. She is the Associated Press-NORC Journalism fellow studying the economics of aging at the University of Chicago. Previously she was part of the investigative team at The Commercial Appeal Newspaper. In 2015, Zamudio and a team of reporters from NPR’s Latino USA received a Peabody National Award for their coverage of Central American migrants. Prior to joining the Appeal, she worked for the Chicago Reporter Magazine covering immigration and labor. Zamudio also spent three years in California working for daily newspapers. She’s a bilingual reporter and blogger with experience producing video and radio stories. She was awarded the Social Justice Reporting Fellowship by the International Center for Journalists in 2014 to investigate sex trafficking in Central America. She has participated in the 2013 NY Times fellowship,2012 Justice in Journalism fellowship, Knight Digital Media Foundation’s 2011 Independent Journalist Fellowship and the 2010 Education Writers Association’s Research and Statistics Fellowship. Zamudio graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2007. Her work has appeared in the Associated Press, National Public Radio, NBC 5 Chicago, Telemundo, Univision among others.
Immigration Law , Health, Labor , Immigrant Issues, Immigration, Labor Issues
Anything product-related
Content
Company Info
Invisible Institute
Invisible Institute is an independent nonprofit journalism production company based in Chicago's South Side. It is dedicated to enhancing citizens' ability to hold public institutions accountable, particularly in the areas of human rights and civil rights. Founded by Jamie Kalven, the organization emerged from grassroots efforts aimed at creating alternatives for ex-offenders and street gang members while practicing a form of human rights documentation known as "guerrilla journalism." The organization focuses on investigative reporting to uncover abuses and systemic issues, especially related to police misconduct. It engages in human rights documentation, multimedia storytelling, and public information curation to support civil rights litigation and raise awareness. Invisible Institute also facilitates conversations on race and justice, aiming to foster understanding and community engagement. Its work empowers local communities, civil rights advocates, journalists, and policymakers by providing the tools and information necessary to demand accountability and reform from public institutions.
Chicago, Illinois, United States
'+1 415-669-4691
Founded: