• Source: Fiona Harvey
    • Fiona Clare Harvey is a Cambridge-educated environmental journalist of longstanding with the London-based newspaper, The Guardian, a position she came to after a decade's work for the Financial Times. Harvey has been the recipient of various professional awards, including twice winning The Foreign Press Association London award for Environment Story of the Year, being named Journalist of the Year at the British Environment and Media Awards, and being named to BBC Woman's Hour Power List 2020, a list of British women leading with regard to the environment.


      Early life and education



      Harvey graduated with a degree in English literature from Christ's College, Cambridge in 1993.


      Career



      Harvey began her journalistic work in 1994, and for some years worked writing and editing in the area of technology news, moving thereafter into work on climate change reporting. Harvey worked for the Financial Times for more than ten years.
      After that, Harvey began work focused on environmental journalism with the London-based newspaper, The Guardian; in that capacity, she has attended almost every United Nations Climate Change conference since 2004, and interviewed many notable people, including Mikhail Gorbachev, Tony Blair, and Antonio Guterres.


      Awards and recognition


      Harvey is the recipient of various professional awards, including The Foreign Press Association London award for Environment Story of the Year on two occasions, and Journalist of the Year at the British Environment and Media Awards. BBC Woman's Hour named Harvey to Power List 2020, a list of women in the UK who have most helped the environment.


      References

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: