Warning:  Trying to access array offset on value of type null in 
/var/www/media.journalismfestival.com/httpdocs/wp-content/themes/vlog/userDetails.php on line 
87
    
        
        
Warning:  Trying to access array offset on value of type null in 
/var/www/media.journalismfestival.com/httpdocs/wp-content/themes/vlog/userDetails.php on line 
91
        
            
                
				
							
	
					
	Alexander Stille
Columbia Journalism School 
	
	
	
	
Alexander Stille is the San Paolo Professor of International Journalism at the Columbia Journalism School in New York.
He graduated with a B.A. from Yale University and earned an M.S. at Columbia. He has worked as a contributor to The New York Times, La Repubblica, The New Yorker magazine, The New York Review of Books, The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, The New Republic, Correspondent, U.S. News & World Report, The Boston Globe, and The Toronto Globe and Mail.
He is the author of Benevolence and Betrayal: Five Italian Jewish Families Under Fascism (1991), Excellent Cadavers: The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic (1995), The Future of the Past (2002) and The Sack of Rome: How a Beautiful European Country with a Fabled History and a Storied Culture Was Taken Over by a Man Named Silvio Berlusconi (2006).
Stille is the winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Award for best work of history (1992), Premio Acqui (1992), San Francisco Chronicle Critics Choice Award (1995), and the Alicia Patterson Foundation award for journalism (1996).
He is the author of the long-read article Who murdered Giulio Regeni? published 04 October 2016 in The Guardian.
 
  Read More
  
      
	  
	  
	  
		  
 
 
				 
Warning:  Undefined array key "offset" in 
/var/www/media.journalismfestival.com/httpdocs/wp-content/themes/vlog/userDetails.php on line 
209
  
							
						
	
		
					
					
		
			
			
 
							
					"Giulio puts all of us in a dutiful position to give new meaning to words, actions, positions, and relationships and visions; because what they did to him could be no longer expressed in the language ...