Name Janine Giovanni | Role Author | |
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Nationality American, French, British Occupation journalist, war reporter, author Spouse(s) Marc Schlossman (divorced 1995); Bruno Girodon (separated) Children Luca Costantino Girodon Parent(s) Vincent and Catherine Buccino di Giovanni Books Madness Visible: A Memoir of, Seven Days in Syria, Eve Arnold: Magnum Legacy, The Place At The End Of The W, The Quick and the Dead: Un Profiles |
Janine di giovanni what i saw in the war
Janine di Giovanni is an author, foreign correspondent, and current Middle East editor at Newsweek.
Contents
- Janine di giovanni what i saw in the war
- The life of eve arnold with janine di giovanni and susan meiselas
- Biography
- Awards
- Publications by di Giovanni
- Documentaries made by Di Giovanni
- Documentary films featuring Di Giovanni
- Fellowships
- References

She is a regular contributor to The Times, Vanity Fair, Granta, The New York Times, and The Guardian. She is a consultant on Syria for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and a Senior Policy Manager/Advisor at the Centre for Conflict, Resolution and Recovery for the School of Public Policy at Central European University.

Di Giovanni has written a number of books and made two long format documentaries for the BBC. She is herself a subject in the documentary films No Man's Land (1993), Bearing Witness (2005) and 7 Days in Syria (2015).
In 2013, di Giovanni was named one of the 100 most influential people in the world of armed violence by the organization Action on Armed Violence (AOAV). She has won various other awards: National Magazine Award, Amnesty International Award, Granada Television's What the Papers Say Foreign Correspondent of the Year, Spear's (UK) Book Awards: Memoir of the Year, The Nation Institute National Headliner Award, Courage in Journalism Award, and Hay medal for prose.
The life of eve arnold with janine di giovanni and susan meiselas
Biography
Di Giovanni began reporting by covering the First Palestinian Intifada in the late 1980s and went on to report nearly every violent conflict since then. She continued writing about Bosnia, and in 2000 she was one of the few foreign reporters to witness the fall of Grozny, Chechnya. Her depictions of the terror after the fall of the city won her several major awards.
During the war in Kosovo, di Giovanni traveled with the Kosovo Liberation Army into occupied Kosovo and sustained a bombing raid on her unit which left many soldiers dead. Her article on that incident, and many of her other experiences during the Balkan Wars, "Madness Visible" for Vanity Fair (2000), won the National Magazine Award for reporting. Her article was later expanded into a book for Knopf/Bloomsbury.
In 2010, di Giovanni was the President of the Jury of the Bayeux-Calvados Awards for war correspondents. She was a participant in the 2013 World Economic Forum, Davos.
She has made two long format documentaries for the BBC. In 2000, she returned to Bosnia to make Lessons from History, a report on five years of peace after the Dayton Accords. The following year she went to Jamaica to report on a little-known but tragic story of police assassinations of civilians, Dead Men Tell No Tales.
Di Giovanni was the subject of a documentary about women war reporters, No Man's Land (1993) which followed her working in Sarajevo. She is one of the journalists featured in another documentary about women war reporters, Bearing Witness (2005), by Barbara Kopple, which was shown at the Tribeca film festival and on the A&E network in May 2005. She is also a subject of the documentary film 7 Days in Syria (2015), directed by Robert Rippberger and produced by Scott Rosenfelt. The film had a private screening at Britain's House of Lords and to senior members of the United Nations.
In a Newsweek article titled "The Fall of France" in 2014, di Giovanni wrote an extensive criticism of the French social and taxation systems. Following publication, a number of points she cited to support her argument were deemed inaccurate. "Les décodeurs", the fact-checking blog of the French newspaper Le Monde, reported nine mistakes. These mistakes included "The top tax rate is 75 percent, and a great many pay in excess of 70 percent" when in actuality it is "companies not individuals who must pay this tax, which only applies to salaries over a million euros". Additionally her claim of milk costing €3 a half liter in Paris and nappies being free to new mothers were inaccurate as, "the price of milk, which they pointed out, costs around €1.30 a litre, while neither creches nor nappies are free". The article was also severely criticised by Pierre Moscovici, the French Minister of Economy.