Calico Culture Strategies

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Episode 38 - Ghazala Irshad - Standards for Justice

Published on: June 24, 2024

Headshot of Ghazala, a dark-skinned South Asian woman with black hair and brown eyes, smiling, wearing a rust-colored mock turtleneck, and with one arm moving hair from her eyes

Ghazala Irshad is The Marshall Project's Style and Standards Editor, and previously, its first Copy Chief. She develops the organization’s editorial standards and promotes best practices for reporting and writing by training staff to ensure their work is accurate, clear, fair and legally sound.

Previously, she was an editor at Newsy, where she covered beats ranging from race and gender to gun legislation. Ghazala also reported on abuses of power during the Arab Spring in Egypt, while pursuing her master's degree in TV and digital journalism from the American University in Cairo. She also holds a certificate in entrepreneurial journalism from the CUNY Tow-Knight Center and a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Missouri-Columbia. Ghazala is a member of the National Association of Black Journalists, a volunteer teacher and mentor with Junior Achievement, and an auxiliary board member of Humor for Hope, a nonprofit that provides trauma-informed humor therapy for underserved populations.

It was a delight talking with Ghazala about journalistic standards, empathy, language, framing, and slow journalism. We loved recording it, and we hope you love listening to it, too.


On Apple Podcasts
On Spotify

The Marshall Project

The Marshall Project newsletters
Life Inside - first person essays by incarcerated people
Opening Statement - Andrew Cohen’s daily rundown of all the news in “crime land’ 
Closing Argument - Jamiles Lartey’s weekly deep dive into topics 

The Marshall Project on social media:
Instagram @marshallproj
Twitter @MarshallProj
Facebook /TheMarshallProject.org
Reddit /marshall_project

The Language Project series of essays edited by Akiba Solomon
The Never-Ending Murder Case: How Mental Competency Laws Can Trap People With Dementia by Christie Thompson, the Marshall Project
Person-first language: are we practicing what we preach? by Amy F Crocker and Susan N Smith, Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare
Conviction and exoneration. the Central Park 5 by PBS
“That Could Have Been Me”: The People Derek Chauvin Choked Before George Floyd By Abbie  Vansickl and Jamiles Lartey, the Marshall Project
Why It’s Not So Simple To Arrest The Cops Who Shot Breonna Taylor by Jamiles Lartey 
The Books Banned in Your State Prisons the Marshall Project

List of other people to shout out
Lawrence Bartley
, publisher of News Inside (print magazine version of The Marshall Project that’s distributed in prisons and jails) and host and executive producer of Inside Story (video series about TMP stories that’s broadcast in prisons and jails)
Wil Cooper, The Marshall Project staff writer who contributed to The Language Project
National Center on Disability and Journalism

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Transcript

Forthcoming