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UID:22840@offbeat.amsterdam
SUMMARY:Black Box Iran – With Nilo Tabrizy
DTSTAMP:20260527T014923Z
DTSTART:20260613T180000Z
DESCRIPTION:How do you report on a closed dictatorship with an oppressed ye
	t defiant\npopulation? Journalist Nilo Tabrizy is an open-source investiga
	tive journalist\nwho covers Iran for Reuters.\n\nFor Western media\, it is
	 almost impossible to provide an accurate picture of\nwhat is happening in
	 Iran. One of the most reliable methods to do so is through\nopen-source r
	eporting\, which uses publicly available data to reconstruct events\nand v
	erify facts. Nilo Tabrizy previously did this work for The New York Times\
	nand The Washington Post. Among other investigations\, she reported on the
	 missile\nstrike on an Iranian girls’ school at the start of the war\, in 
	which about 165\nstudents were killed. How do you conduct data-driven inve
	stigations in a country\nnotorious for internet blackouts?\n\nEarlier\, Ta
	brizy covered the Woman\, Life\, Freedom movement demonstrations that\neru
	pted in Iran in 2022 after the death of Mahsa Jîna Amini. About these even
	ts\,\nTabrizy wrote the book For the Sun After Long Nights\, whose Dutch t
	ranslation\,\nZusters in Iran (Zwartjes & Labovic)\, was recently publishe
	d. In conversation\nwith Tabrizy\, on the current situation in Iran and wh
	at it means to report on\nthe country that she and her family once fled th
	emselves.
URL:https://offbeat.amsterdam/event/black-box-iran-with-nilo-tabrizy
GEO:52.3630433;4.8828596
LOCATION:De Balie - Kleine-Gartmanplantsoen 10\, 1017 RR Amsterdam
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:amsterdam-centrum,books,geopolitiek & mensenrechten,leidseplein
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><strong>How do you report on a closed dicta
	torship with an oppressed yet defiant population? Journalist Nilo Tabrizy 
	is an open-source investigative journalist who covers Iran for Reuters.</s
	trong></p> <p>For Western media, it is almost impossible to provide an acc
	urate picture of what is happening in Iran. One of the most reliable metho
	ds to do so is through open-source reporting, which uses publicly availabl
	e data to reconstruct events and verify facts. Nilo Tabrizy previously did
	 this work for <em>The New York Time</em>s and <em>The Washington Post</em
	>. Among other investigations, she reported on the missile strike on an Ir
	anian girls’ school at the start of the war, in which about 165 students w
	ere killed. How do you conduct data-driven investigations in a country not
	orious for internet blackouts?</p> <p>Earlier, Tabrizy covered the Woman, 
	Life, Freedom movement demonstrations that erupted in Iran in 2022 after t
	he death of Mahsa Jîna Amini. About these events, Tabrizy wrote the book <
	em>For the Sun After Long Nights</em>, whose Dutch translation, <em>Zuster
	s in Iran</em> (Zwartjes &amp; Labovic), was recently published. In conver
	sation with Tabrizy, on the current situation in Iran and what it means to
	 report on the country that she and her family once fled themselves.</p>
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