These days, AAJA has trouble maintaining relevance to some of its members. Since its peak in 2005, annual membership has plunged 60 percent to 1,350 people in 2015.
Read More »Journalist Q&A: Asian reporters in the political press scrum
VOICES checked in with three Asian-American journalists who have covered campaigns past and present: SABRINA SIDDIQUI, who covers national politics for The Guardian; TRACY JAN, who covers national politics for The Boston Globe and BOBBY CAINA CALVAN, who was most ...
Read More »Transracial adoptees examine their roots through AAJA
Mei-Ling Hopgood was born in Taiwan and came to America after being adopted by a white family. She is a transracial adoptee – someone whose race differs from her adopted family. “Each adoptee has a unique relationship with their family ...
Read More »Lack of major presidential candidates raises questions about UNITY breakup
Eight years ago, the nation’s minority journalist groups met together in one convention — UNITY — and welcomed a presidential candidate that accepted an invitation to speak: Barack Obama. This election year, there was no UNITY convention. NABJ and NAHJ ...
Read More »Job that no one wants? AAJA president
When Yvonne Leow talks about the reasons why AAJA members should vote for her as president on Thursday at the national convention in Las Vegas, she doesn’t have to worry about losing the election. That’s because there’s no one running ...
Read More »Nevada’s new rules for fantasy sports
Blackjack tables, slot machines and poker rooms fill Las Vegas’ world-famous casinos, but Nevada residents aren’t allowed to play one of the fastest-growing games in the country: daily fantasy sports. The state ruled in late 2015 that daily fantasy sites—where ...
Read More »Meet the 2016 Voices Students and Staff
Student staff Peter Choi is a senior at Seattle Pacific University studying Journalism. He is from Seoul, South Korea. He is also passionate about current international events like foreign relations with North Korea. He hopes to see himself working as ...
Read More »AAJA Asia chapter links local and international journalists together
The first overseas chapter of the AAJA garnered skepticism when it was first introduced twenty years ago, with only a handful of members. Since then, the AAJA Asia chapter has flourished.
Read More »ACLU: Las Vegas police policy shows power of body-worn cameras
Despite tensions over recent police killings of black people, police departments across the U.S. have been slow to equip officers with a tool civil rights activists say can help avert future tragedies: body-worn cameras. “It’s happening, we always wish it ...
Read More »Competition for Asian hires increases as new Asian-themed casinos being built
Casino executives on the Las Vegas Strip are bracing for competition with the opening of two new Asian-themed hotels, which they worry will make the fight for Asian-language speaking workers even more challenging.
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