Elizabeth Arnold

Elizabeth Arnold
Associate Professor
Journalism and Public Communications
ART 326
907-786-4186
earnold4@alaska.edu

Education

  • B.A. Colgate University, 1982 
  • Shorenstein Fellowship, Harvard University, 2018 

Biography

Elizabeth Arnold is a former National Public Radio (NPR) Political Correspondent and the producer of . Arnold鈥檚 public radio career spans twenty years. She was a familiar voice on Morning Edition and All Things Considered, and a regular presence on PBS Washington Week, covering Congress, the White House, and the American West. Arnold has received numerous awards, including a duPont Columbia Silver Baton and the Dirksen Award for Distinguished Reporting of Congress. Over the last decade, she has reported on the ecological and human impacts of global warming from some of the most remote areas of the Arctic. She most recently completed a fellowship at Harvard鈥檚 Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy where she researched the role of the press in effectively communicating climate change, specifically in the Arctic. 

Teaching Responsibilities

Professor Arnold teaches a wide range of courses that include Podcasting, Multimedia Reporting, Climate Change Reporting, First Amendment and Media Ethics, and Political Campaigns and the Media

Professional & Department Service

Arnold is an associate professor with the Journalism and Public Communications Department. For ten years she has served as the Chair of the Student Media Board and as advisor to the student radio station KRUA. She is a founding member of the Project for Excellence in Journalism and a frequent speaker at national media forums. 

Research Interests

Arnold's most current research and reporting is focused on climate science communication, most specifically in the Arctic region, involving mitigation, adaptation and resilience. 

Publications

Arnold's twenty plus years of reporting can be found in the NPR archives. 
   Recent publications and presentations include: 
    
   The Face of Climate Change in the Arctic:  
   Harvard research paper:  
   LA Times oped: 

Career History/Work Experience

Arnold's journalism career began at the Tundra Drums in Bethel, Alaska. Her local reporting at KTOO-FM in Juneau led to her national reporting at NPR. Additionally, she has reported for National Geographic, Marketplace, BBC, CBC, America Abroad, and numerous other media outlets. She continues to report for NPR and other news organizations. She has been a professor at 新加坡六合彩开奖 since 2009.