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Economic Hardship Reporting Project
JD Vance is the Toxic Byproduct of America’s Obsession with Bootstrap Narratives
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and Literary Hub. With the news that JD Vance was chosen by Donald Trump to be the Vice Presidential candidate, I shuddered in recognition. As an author and an editor, I have been publishing-adjacent for most of my life. Vance’s story—as recounted in his bestselling book Hillbilly Elegy, a rags-to-riches tale that struck a chord with Americans—was brought into the world by the liberal Manhattan publishing industry in 2016, and after that adapted and adopted by Democratic Hollywood.
Brooklyn, NY: Alissa Quart In Conversation with Adelle Waldman and Other Authors
On June 27, 2024, EHRP executive director Alissa Quart discussed her latest book, Bootstrapped, at POWERHOUSE Arena‘s Industry City location. At the event, called “The Art of Work,” Quart was joined by Adelle Waldman, author of Help Wanted (inspired by Barbara Ehrenreich), Hyeseung Song, author of Docile, and Kelly McMasters, author of The Leaving Season.
EHRP Adds History, Housing Experts to Working Sources
Economic Hardship Reporting Project is proud to announce that it expanded its Working Sources database to include experts in History and Housing. Our History experts range from academics who study social movements to oral historians, while our Housing experts include tenant organizers and affordable housing advocates. . Launched in 2022,...
A Fighter for the Working Class
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and The American Prospect. Linda Tirado is a fine writer. And as a result of police brutality against journalists, she is now dying in her early forties. It started when Tirado covered a George Floyd protest in Minneapolis in 2020. She was shot in...
Nuoc: A Viet-Cajun Story
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and New Orleans Public Radio. In Vietnamese culture, water and home are so linked that they share a word. The Vietnamese word for water is nước. But nước also means homeland. Today–how the Vietnamese community has to reimagine its relationship...
EHRP Hires Development Consultants from Bash Advisory
EHRP is pleased to announce that it has hired two development consultants from Bash Advisory, Sara Elghobashy and Matilda Johnson. Welcome, Sara and Matilda!. The Economic Hardship Reporting Project supports independent journalists so they can create gripping stories which often counter the typical disparaging narratives about inequality. This high-quality journalism is then co-published with mainstream media outlets mobilizing readers to address systemic economic hardship.
Permanent Crisis
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and The Baffler. TO EXPRESS THE AMBIENT FEELING that “things are getting worse,” there exists, of course, a meme. It plots iterations of a chart, and on its x-axis floats the disembodied, smiling face of President Ronald Reagan. After his inauguration, watch the data veer up and off into oblivion: from health care spending, executive pay, and the size of the federal government, to the privatization of public services, social isolation, and economic inequality. The bottom line: only half of babies born in 1980—today’s forty-four-year-olds—will make as much money as their parents did.
The Worm Charmers
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and Oxford American. A hint of blue on the horizon meant morning was coming. And as they have for the past fifty-four years, Audrey and Gary Revell stepped out their screen door, walked down a ramp, and climbed into their pickup truck. Passing a cup of coffee back and forth, they headed south into Tate’s Hell—one corner of a vast wilderness in Florida’s panhandle where the Apalachicola National Forest runs into the Gulf of Mexico. Soon, they turned off the road and onto a two-track that stretched into a silhouette of pine trees. Their brake lights disappeared into the forest, and after about thirty minutes, they parked the truck along the road just as daylight spilled through the trees. Gary took one last sip of coffee, grabbed a wooden stake and a heavy steel file, and walked off into the woods. Audrey slipped on a disposable glove, grabbed a bucket, and followed. Gary drove the wooden stake, known as a “stob,” into the ground and began grinding it with the steel file. A guttural noise followed as the ground hummed. Pine needles shook, and the soil shivered. Soon, the ground glowed with pink earthworms. Audrey collected them one by one to sell as live bait to fishermen. What drew the worms to the surface seemed like sorcery. For decades, nobody could say exactly why they came up, even the Revells who’d become synonymous with the tradition here. They call it worm grunting.
Brooklyn, NY: EHRP Labor Exhibit at Photoville Festival 2024
From June 1 to June 16, 2024, visit Brooklyn Bridge Park to experience EHRP’s labor project with Mother Jones and Magnum Foundation in person. The installation, “Can American Labor Seize the Moment?”, derives from earlier this year when EHRP-supported photojournalists documented the everyday challenges and solidarity within the post-pandemic labor movement.
EHRP’s Deborah Jian Lee Wins Education Writers Association Award
EHRP is honored to announce that its senior editor Deborah Jian Lee won the EGF Accelerator’s Eddie Prize from the Education Writers Association for “Persecution in the Name of the Lord,” which was co-published by EHRP and Esquire in August 2023. In her piece, Lee reports how over 200 federally funded religious schools exploit the religious exemption from Title IX—the federal policy that protects students from discrimination—and violate the civil rights of countless LGBTQ+ students.
EHRP-Supported Housing Series Named Finalist for NAHJ Award
EHRP is excited to announce that its housing series co-published with VPM News in 2023 was named a finalist for an Ñ Award from the National Association of Hispanic Journalists. The series chronicled the struggles of residents of a mobile home park in Louisa County, Virginia, after it was purchased by an investment firm in 2022. The two-part series was recognized in the radio/online audio journalism category and reported by Keyris Manzanares, Mark Robinson and Duy Linh Tu.
EHRP Senior Editor Receives Honorable Mention from Asian American Journalists Association
In May 2024, EHRP senior editor Deborah Jian Lee’s EHRP/Esquire 5500-word feature, “Persecution in the Name of the Lord,” received an Honorable Mention at the Asian American Journalists Association Awards. Lee’s piece was honored in the Excellence in Written Reporting, News category.
Student Debt Is Taxing Young People’s Mental Health
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and Teen Vogue. As the first person in her family to go college, Catherine fought hard to get her bachelor’s. After transferring from community college to a four-year university, she worked as a barista and a line cook, trapped in a cycle where she’d take on extra hours to cover her bills, then feel too tired to study. But it still wasn’t enough. She regularly felt desperate for money. She put books and necessities, like hygiene supplies and food, on credit cards, accumulating debt she’s yet to be able to pay off. By the time she graduated in 2018, she also had about $14,000 in student loan debt, which she described as causing “a lot of mental strain.”
Brooklyn, NY: Alissa Quart in Conversation with Jia Tolentino
Executive director Alissa Quart joined journalist Jia Tolentino at an EHRP fundraiser in Brooklyn to discuss our organization’s mission to support independent journalists as well as to read from our anthology, Going for Broke. Attendees included renowned editors and journalists from publications ranging from The New Yorker, The Guardian, and The New York Times, along with our friends from the Ford Foundation and many others.
EHRP Contributor Mark Robinson Nominated for Local Emmy
EHRP is thrilled to announce that our contributor Mark Robinson has been nominated for a local Emmy for his two-part feature, co-published with Keyris Manzanares in Virginia Public Media, covering the mobile home residents who are pushing back against the investment firm that bought the land beneath their trailers. Among...
A Look At Lives Transformed By the Student Debt Crisis
Co-published by Economic Hardship Reporting Project and Teen Vogue. Early on a Thursday morning in Jacksonville, Florida, Ryan Moran and his wife are chatting over breakfast. The couple talk finances, bills, monthly budgets, and the possibility of buying their first home. The COVID-era federal student loan moratorium would have been...
New Books Network Interviews EHRP’s Alissa Quart
On May 11, 2024, EHRP executive director Alissa Quart appeared on the New Books Network’s Politics & Polemics podcast, hosted by Tom Discenna, to discuss her most recent book Bootstrapped: Liberating Ourselves from the American Dream. Listen to the full interview below or on the New Books Network website.
Puffin/EHRP Fellow Molly Crabapple Wins NY Press Club Award
We are thrilled to share the wonderful news that Puffin/EHRP Fellow Molly Crabapple has just won a New York Press Club Journalism Award in the consumer reporting category. Molly’s illustrated cover article accompanied the EHRP/The Nation article, “The Revolution Against Shady Landlords Has Begun,” which highlighted the tenants fighting for Good Cause Eviction, a measure that would protect them against landlords’ capricious evictions.
EHRP-Supported Documentary Wins Peabody Award
EHRP-supported documentary The Post Roe Baby Boom: Inside Mississippi’s Maternal Health Crisis won a Peabody Award in the public service category. Produced in partnership with USA Today and The Tennessean, Mona Iskander and Yasmeen Qureshi follow Mississippi women’s forced pregnancies and births after the Dobbs ruling overturned Roe v. Wade.
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The aim of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project (EHRP) is to change the national conversation around poverty and economic insecurity. The journalism we commission—from narrative features and photo essays to documentary films—puts a human face on financial instability.
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