Neha_Dixit

Neha Dixit

Neha Dixit

Indian journalist and author


Neha Dixit is an Indian freelance journalist covering politics, gender and social justice.[1] She has been awarded over a dozen awards including the Chameli Devi Jain Award (2016) as well as CPJ International Press Freedom Award (2019).[1][2]

Quick Facts Nationality, Alma mater ...

Early life

Neha 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.[3]

Career

Neha began her career as an investigative journalist with Tehelka, before switching to the Special Investigation Team of India Today.[1] Since 2013, she has been a freelancer.[4] Her works have been published in The Wire, Al Jazeera, Outlook, The New York Times, The Caravan, Himal Southasian, and The Washington Post among others.[1][5]

Notable reports and awards

In August 2014, Dixit detailed the circumstances faced by seven rape survivors of the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots.[3] This won her the 2014 Kurt Schork Award in International Journalism and the 2015 Press Institute of India-Red Cross award.[3]

In 2016, Dixit chronicled (for Outlook) the abduction of 31 girls from Assam by a Hindu nationalist organization to infuse them with "nationalist ideologies" — a criminal defamation suit was subsequently filed against Dixit, in what was condemned by Committee to Protect Journalists as a tool of intimidation.[1][5] The same year, she was conferred with the Chameli Devi Jain Award, the highest honor for women journalists in India: her meticulous nature of coverage and cross-checking of involved facts were admired in particular.[5]

In 2018, she reported on poor Indians, who were unethically drawn into participating in illegal drug-trials by pharma giants.[1] In 2019, Dixit documented a range of extrajudicial killings by police forces in Uttar Pradesh and other states, getting threats from high-ranked police officials, in the process.[1] Her reports prompted a note of concern by Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.[1][6] The same year, she received the CPJ International Press Freedom Award.[1]

She has been recognised as one of the most credible Indian journalists in India because of her painstaking in-depth ground, intersectional reporting that steers clear of binary, opinionated, formulaic mainstream coverage of news.recognised

She has been a visiting faculty at Ashoka University, MCRC, Jamia Millia Islamia University, NALSAR, Hyderabad, IIMC and others.

Books

In 2016, Neha 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 the exploitation of women in India.[7][8]

She 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.[9]


She wrote the piece, 'Outcast[e]/Outlawed: The Bandit Queen (1996)' for the book ‘Bad’ Women of Bombay Films: Studies in Desire and Anxiety published by Palgrave Macmillan. Details the history of desire and anxiety underlying the cinematic representation of the modern Indian woman.


She received the New India Fellowship in 2017 for her debut non-fiction book 'An Unknown Indian' driven by long research and narrative journalism. She will tell the story of an impoverished Muslim migrant family in India’s capital, negotiating the pitfalls of politics and economic servitude, holding up a mirror to the shadows behind the sheen of “New India.” The book will be published by Juggernaut books in South Asia in 2024.

Personal life

Dixit is married to Nakul Singh Sawhney, an Indian documentary filmmaker.[10]

Dixit has been charged with "inciting hatred" by the Government of India, a move that has been criticized by the Committee to Protect Journalists.[11] Because of her reporting, she has been subjected to threatening calls and an attempted acid attack and a break attempt in her house.[12]


More information Year, Award ...

References

  1. "Neha Dixit, India". Committee to Protect Journalists. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  2. "Faculty/Staff". Ashoka University. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  3. "Two Girls in a Tree: Why the Indian Rape Photos Are Inexcusable". Huffington Post, 4 August 2014. by Sandip Roy.
  4. "One-of-a-kind graphic anthology on contemporary India". Kanika Sharma, Hindustan Times 16 May 2016

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Neha_Dixit, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.