The Fuller Project
@fullerproject.org
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The award-winning global nonprofit newsroom dedicated to groundbreaking reporting on women. www.fullerproject.org
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In 2024, women worldwide faced challenges from climate disruption, rising authoritarianism, and persistent inequality.

The Fuller Project stood as the leading journalistic force documenting their struggles and resilience.

Read our impact report

bit.ly/FullerImpact...
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Read their reflections, plus Eliza’s full piece and the latest stories from our newsroom, in this week’s newsletter: fullerproject.org/sign-up-to-o...

#FeministJournalism #WomenInMedia #GenderNews #JournalismMatters
Photograph of editor Ankita Anand speaking into a microphone at an event. Text quote: “Feminist journalism goes beyond ‘women’s issues’ and ‘women achievers’. It shows how the misogynist, cis-heteronormative structure of the world harms the relational fabric of humanity.” Attribution: Ankita Anand, editor with cross-border newsroom Unbias the News. Portrait of investigative journalist Kiki Mordi outdoors in sunlight, wearing glasses. Text quote: “In today’s political climate, constantly reshaped by authoritarian resurgence and fascist rhetoric, it is vital for resisting erasure and distortion, and ensuring historical records remain inclusive, democratic, and reflective of society.” Attribution: Kiki Mordi, founder of Document Women.
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For the launch of The Feminist Investigative Journalism Handbook, Eliza asked five journalists from around the world what feminist journalism means to them. Their answers remind us that it’s not a niche, it’s a necessity.
Portrait of journalist Claire Provost with text quote: “Feminist journalism is an urgently-needed corrective to media ecosystems that have often failed to represent and include diverse communities. This is about what we publish, plus how we work and who makes decisions.” Attribution: Claire Provost, investigative journalist and editor of The Feminist Investigative Journalism Handbook. Portrait of journalist Tan Hui Yee on a black background. Text quote: “Feminist journalism is expansive. It’s a mixture of self-interrogation, systematic inquiry of power structures and surfacing of perspectives that are underrepresented in our respective environments.” Attribution: Tan Hui Yee, deputy managing editor of Lighthouse Reports. Portrait of author Luba Kassova smiling with hand under chin. Text quote: “Feminist journalism is journalism which decentres the otherwise prevalent focus on men in the news.” Attribution: Luba Kassova, author of The Missing Perspectives of Women in News.
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“Feminist journalism,” she says, does the same. It names a way of reporting that questions power, centres those too often left out, and resists the quiet erasures that shape the stories we tell about the world.
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If the new season of The Morning Show proves anything, it’s that journalism can talk feminism without always practising it.

But as our editor-in-chief Eliza Anyangwe writes in this week’s newsletter, language gives shape to what we feel, and to the kind of world we want to build.
Graphic with The Fuller Project logo. Two women wearing headsets appear focused in a newsroom setting. Text reads: “What is feminist journalism? And why does it matter?”
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In the Netherlands, around 20 have already applied for asylum, citing threats, discrimination, and rising hostility back home.

As anti-trans laws spread across the U.S., the search for safety is starting to move beyond its borders.
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Could trans Americans ever be recognized as refugees abroad?
YouTube video by The Fuller Project
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“I never thought I’d have to seek asylum from America.”

When actor Indya Moore said those words from Paris, it raised a difficult question: could trans Americans ever be recognised as refugees abroad?
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For The Fuller Project, @irispase.bsky.social spoke to UK sexual health experts Grace Green from @brookcharity.bsky.social and Dr Frances Yarlett from The Lowdown about how to spot misleading posts — and why alarmist content resonates so strongly across generations.
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How to spot misinformation about the pill
YouTube video by The Fuller Project
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What makes the contraceptive pill so controversial on social media? From claims it causes infertility to suggestions it changes who you’re attracted to, misinformation spreads fast — and often looks convincing.
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Yonga shares the sense of urgency she feels to create change in Africa, what she’s learned from her fears, and how reviving memory is transforming her community, in this week’s newsletter 5-in-5 interview.

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Since 2016, the museum she co-founded has been connecting lost and stolen historical artefacts – taken during the British colonial era – with the communities they came from.
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What comes to mind when you hear the phrase “reverse treasure hunting”? That’s how art curator Samba Yonga describes her work at the Women’s History Museum of Zambia.
Samba Yonga, a Zambian curator, discusses Africa's transformative changes and the need to rebuild knowledge systems.
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From Seneca Falls in 1848 to the 19th Amendment in 1920, suffragists fought for decades to secure the vote. What can this history teach us about the fight for voting equality today?
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The fight for US women's suffrage
YouTube video by The Fuller Project
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Voting rights in the US are under attack again. The SAVE Act could block millions of women from registering and voting. But women have been here before.
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These principles have been integral to her successful collaborations with platforms like Audible, Spotify, Pinterest and the BBC and we are excited to work with her as we reset Fuller to be both audience centered and impact focused.
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Imriel is a strategist at heart and brings both systems thinking and community-centred leadership to her work. Her approach to audience development prioritises trust, participation, and creating long-term value.
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Before that, she launched the UK’s first podcast network dedicated to creators of colour and produced Wanna Be, an award-winning podcast spotlighting creatives in the entertainment industry.
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She founded Content is Queen in 2017 and pioneered programmes that centred underrepresented creators and delivered high-impact audio campaigns for international brands like Wallpaper*, Doc Society, and The Conversation.
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Today, Imriel Morgan joins The Fuller Project as Head of Community and Audience Development. Morgan is an award-winning media entrepreneur, strategist, and community builder with over a decade of experience shaping inclusive spaces within the audio and media industries.
Imriel Morgan, new Head of Community and Audience Development at The Fuller Project, aims to engage their growing audience. Eliza Anyangwe, Editor-in-chief, stands next to a quote about Imriel's new role focusing on audience needs in The Fuller Project newsroom.
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Women make up the backbone of fast fashion. Now Trump’s tariffs are tearing their livelihoods apart — with generational consequences.

Get the Fuller story: fullerproject.org/story/women-...
Illustration of a woman sewing at a machine, her face lit in warm tones against a muted background. Text over the image reads: “Millions of women depend on low-paid fast fashion jobs. Trump’s tariffs are making their lives even more precarious.” The Fuller Project logo is at the top.
Reposted by The Fuller Project
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Last night, we co-hosted an #UNGA event with @fullerproject.org on the role of the media in challenging disinformation around sexual and reproductive health and rights.

Huge thanks to those who participated, including @nickkristof.bsky.social @ihartericka.bsky.social @khosla.bsky.social
#ChoiceWeek
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In this week’s 5 in 5 interview, Bunch reflects on how the Black civil rights movement shaped her politics and why today’s global backlash against gender equality might, paradoxically, be a sign of progress.
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“Women’s rights are human rights.” It sounds obvious now, but three decades ago the world had to be convinced.

At the 1993 UN World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna, feminist activist and organizer Charlotte Bunch helped lead a campaign that changed history.
Charlotte Bunch speaks at an event, emphasizing that progress on women's and human rights comes from serious dialogue.
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Why does this gap persist, and what would it take to fix it?

Share your thoughts below.

#bivisibilityday #bivisibilitymonth #bisexualhistory
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Bi women need better healthcare — here's why
YouTube video by The Fuller Project
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Bisexual women face some of the highest rates of depression, anxiety, and self-harm among women — yet healthcare systems often fail to meet their needs.

From structural bias that erases bisexuality to higher rates of violence and exclusion, the health risks are clear, but rarely addressed.