AAJA

AAJA - Asian American Journalists Association
1182 Market Street
Suite 320
San Francisco, CA 94102

Phone: 415 346-2051
Fax: 415 346-6343
E-Mail: Available Here
  
Website URL: Available Here
Employment URL: 
Driving Directions: Available Here

Calendar: www.aaja.org/calendar/
Chapters: www.aaja.org/membership/chapters/
Membership: www.aaja.org/membership/join/


OUR MISSION

Our mission is three-fold:

1. To encourage Asian American and Pacific Islanders to enter the ranks of journalism
2. To work for fair and accurate coverage of Asian American and Pacific Islanders
3. To increase the number of Asian American and Pacific Islander journalists and news managers in the industry.

OUR HISTORY

The Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) was founded in 1981 by a few Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) journalists who felt a need to support one another and to encourage more Asian American and Pacific Islanders to pursue journalism at a time when there were few Asian American and Pacific Islander faces in the media. AAJA owes its founding to the vision of a small group of Los Angeles journalists. They included KCBS-TV News Anchor, Tritia Toyota Los Angeles Times Business Editor, Bill Sing and Los Angeles Times Fashion Editor, Nancy Yoshihara. AAJA's expansion into a truly national organization took off in 1985 with the formation of additional chapters.

As a non-profit membership organization with more than 2,300 members in 19 chapters across the U.S. and Asia, AAJA's largest membership bases are generally concentrated in metropolitan areas on the West Coast (Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle), East Coast (New York City and Washington, D.C.) and Mid-West (Chicago). Members are also organized in other areas throughout the U.S. (Arizona, Atlanta, Chicago, Florida, Hawaii, Michigan, Minnesota, New England, Philadelphia, Portland, Sacramento, Texas, and San Diego).

In addition, AAJA has a growing number of members working throughout Asia -- in Tokyo, Singapore, Hong Kong and Bangladesh, which underscores the rapid growth of media properties in Asia and points the way to future expansion of the organization. Close to one-third of AAJA's members are students, attesting to the organization's emphasis on bringing young people into the news business. AAJA has also relied on leadership in the community and Asian-language media.

AAJA is proud to include among its members some of the top journalists in the country, from network news anchors and reporters to Pulitzer Prize-winning writers, editors and photographers, to national radio show producers and major magazine editors.

In 1995, AAJA was honored with the Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism by the University of Missouri for its contributions to the industry.


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