Tracie Powell to be Awarded Media Changemaker Prize from Mercer’s Center for Collaborative Journalism
Thursday, January 19th, 2023
Mercer University’s Center for Collaborative Journalism (CCJ) will recognize Tracie Powell, a leader in philanthropic efforts to increase racial equity and diversity in the news media, with its Media Changemaker Prize on Feb. 3 at the center’s National Journalism Advisory Board meeting.
Powell is the founder of The Pivot Fund, which seeks to support independent BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) community news. She was a fall 2021 Shorenstein Center Research Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School, where she researched mechanisms for funding and capacity building for media outlets run by and for BIPOC and other traditionally marginalized communities.
“Tracie has dedicated much of her career to helping underserved communities address gaps in information access and making sure more traditional newsrooms reflect the communities they serve,” CCJ Director Debbie Blankenship said. “In her current role at The Pivot Fund, she is funding nontraditional news organizations that work in these spaces but are often overlooked by traditional journalism grants and assistance.
“Tracie was an obvious choice to recognize as our 2023 Changemaker as her work is literally changing and improving information access in communities across Georgia and the nation.”
The CCJ’s Media Changemaker Prize is awarded annually to a journalist, entrepreneur or other media figure who is changing the way the public consumes news and information and is working to find solutions to address information gaps.
“I want to thank the Center for Collaborative Journalism and Mercer University for this exciting honor,” Powell said. “This is a recognition not only for myself and The Pivot Fund but for the important independent local newsrooms that work so hard to meet the information needs of their communities.”
The work is not easy, but it is necessary to rebuild public trust and credibility, she said. The best way to do that is to start by supporting local and community newsrooms.
“These community newsrooms have earned their audiences’ trust; provide fact-based, locally relevant and accessible reporting; are often BIPOC led and serving; promote civic engagement; and defend against the spread of disinformation,” she said.
Powell is the immediate past board chair of LION Publishers, a professional journalism association for independent news publishers where she has served on the board since 2017. Prior to her work with The
Pivot Fund and Harvard, she was the founding fund manager of the Racial Equity in Journalism Fund at Borealis Philanthropy.
She is also the founder of AllDigitocracy.org, which focuses on the media and its impact on diverse communities. She was a senior fellow with the Democracy Fund, where she worked on the Public Square initiative that seeks to support informed dialogue through nonprofit journalism investments.
Powell was a 2016 John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University and has written regularly for the Columbia Journalism Review and Poynter Online. Her work has been highlighted by countless journalism and academic institutions, including Harvard’s Nieman Journalism Lab. She is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center and the University of Georgia’s Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.
The CCJ first awarded its Media Changemaker Prize in 2015. Past recipients include:
- 2022: Meg Coker, The Current
- 2021: Robin Kemp, The Clayton Crescent
- 2020: Sarah Alvarez, Outlier Media
- 2019: Celeste Headlee, journalist
- 2018: Michelle Holmes, al.com
- 2017: Teya Ryan, Georgia Public Broadcasting
- 2016: Jennifer Brandel, Hearken
- 2015: Matt Thompson, The Atlantic