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Forum for the Academy and the Public 2025

  • Home
  • Schedule of Events
  • Keynote Recording
  • Map and Directions
  • Co-Sponsors Of the 2025 Forum
  • Participant Bios
    • Friday keynote
    • Saturday: Opening Conversation and Panel 1
    • Saturday: Panel 2 and Lunchtime Conversation
    • Saturday: Panel 3
    • Saturday: Panel 4
    • Saturday: Wrap Up

2025 Forum for the Academy and the Public

Francisco Goya's The Third of May, 1808; text "Facts Under Fire, Feb. 7-8, 2025 on UCI campus

About

The Forum for the Academy and the Public’s 2025 annual conference will explore the varied ways that journalism and journalists are under fire with autocratic trends threatening democracy and democratic institutions in the United States and around the world. Co-directed by Amy Wilentz (Professor of English, UCI and prize-winning author) and Jeffrey Wasserstrom (Chancellor’s Professor of History, UCI with courtesy School of Law), the event will move from newsrooms to battlefields via lively discussions among experts from a diverse range of contexts.

One focus will be on coverage of the two great global problems of our era: the rise of powerful and potentially dangerous technologies; and the threat of climate change. We’ll look at how and why these topics are reported or not reported. We’ll also discuss how political actors are quashing policy debates and putting forward false narratives. We’ll consider the decline of the newspaper and the media in general, as social media takes hold of the public’s mind and platforms like “X” morph from user-friendly discussion forums into politically charged platforms controlled by billionaires, and filled with bots, trolls, and AI-generated deep fakes. What is real and what is fabricated in stories about wars and elections? How does the blurring of lines between credible and misleading forms of information impact  our political discourse, our culture, and the very future of humankind, as we face a variety of unprecedented (and largely underreported) existential threats?

Key Event Details

The keynote will take place on Friday afternoon, Feb. 7, from 4:30-6:15 pm, at the UCI School of Law, EDU 1111; please register for in-person attendance here. For those who cannot attend in person, it will also be livestreamed – register here for the link.

All other Forum events will also take place on Saturday, Feb. 8, at the UCI School of Law, EDU 1111, from 9:15-5:00 PM. Register for the event here.

The full schedule can be found here, and directions to the Forum can be found on this page.

Our Participants (in alphabetical order)

Olunfunmilayo Arewa, a George Mason law professor whose research includes technology, the creative industries, and business law; Dean Baquet, former editor-in-chief of the New York Times and keynote speaker for the conference; Sewell Chan, executive editor of the Columbia Journalism Review; Paul Dourish, head of UCI’s Center for Responsible, Ethical and Accessible Technology; Sheera Frenkel, winner of the Mirror Award for her New York Times reporting on misinformation; Kaya Genç, an acclaimed Turkish novelist and translator, as well as Istanbul correspondent for the Los Angeles Review of Books; Jodie Ginsberg, CEO of the Committee to Protect Journalists; Rick Hasen, head of UCLA’s Safeguarding Democracy Project; Lucy Hornby, an expert and journalist on the Chinese state; Polina Ivanova, a Financial Times’ foreign correspondent who covers Russia and Ukraine; David Kaye, a former UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Opinion; Doug Kysar, a Yale law professor whose research include torts, animal law, environmental law, and climate change; Nina Lakhani, the Guardian’s senior climate justice reporter; Elizabeth Loftus, a professor whose award-winning research focuses on the malleability of human memory; Widlore Mérancourt, an award-winning journalist who is the editor-in-chief of Ayibopost and frequent Washington Post contributor who reports in Haiti on politics and the rise of the gangs there; Jeffrey Ngo, a historian, writer, and pro-democracy Hong Kong activist based out of Washington, DC; Ivan Ogilvie, freelance videographer and photojournalist who will share his work from Burma; Allison Perlman, a professor whose research includes the history of broadcasting, American social movements, media law and policy, and popular memory; Angilee Shah, CEO and Editor-in-Chief of the nonprofit news organization Charlottesville Tomorrow; Cascade Sorte, a biologist at UCI who focuses on the relationship between species distribution and climate change; Katie Stallard, Senior Editor, China and Global Affairs at The New Statesman; novelist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Hector Tobar; Alan Weisman, author of The World Without Us, an influential book on climate in the global future; and Alex Wang, a UCLA law professor whose research focuses on Chinese environmental governance.

Learn more about our participants, and register for the event. We are grateful for the generosity of our co-sponsors, listed here. Please continue to check back here for information as the Forum draws near. For questions, please contact SueJeanne Koh at the Humanities Center, sj.koh@uci.edu.

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