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Updated: August 21, 2009
NABJ Publications
NABJ Style is a momentous effort three years in the making. It is offered as a stylebook for newsrooms and others on terms and language usage of special interest or relevance to our membership and our community. It is meant to be as much a resource for our own members as for anyone else in newsrooms and journalism classrooms as well as other students, educators and researchers, etc. The other publications follow:

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Reinvent Yourself
NABJ founders, past presidents and former board members share personal essays of reinvention. Full of candor, insight, innovation and perseverance, these essays are perhaps the first drafts of the history of a generation of black journalists in America. 3.5 MB PDF, requires the free Adobe Reader. |
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NABJ Strategic Plan 2007
It has been 10 years since NABJ has produced a strategic plan. This plan addresses the far-reaching changes in the media landscape, how NABJ will prosper, and how NABJ will help its members amid change.
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2006 Annual Report
The 2006 NABJ Annual Report, delivered to members at the NABJ membership meeting during the Las Vegas convention, is now available online to all members. (3 MB PDF, requires the free Adobe Reader.)
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NABJ Journal - Our Publication for Members
The NABJ Journal is available online to members. Become a NABJ member to read it in your living room or online, and consider contributing your skills and expertise as a writer or editor or visual journalist.
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'Committed to the Cause'
In this special Second Edition, the 30th Anniversary Committee presents essays on NABJ's first 15 leaders. Award-winning writers, who knew their presidents and are industry leaders in America, chronicle the rise of NABJ.
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'Voices of Anger, Cries of Concern'
In April 2001 the American Society of Newspapers Editors confirmed that more black journalists were leaving the industry than entering. More than a news release was needed. The concerns are still relevant.
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2004 Annual Report
The 2004 NABJ Annual Report, which was handed out to members at the NABJ membership meeting during the UNITY 2004 convention in early August, is now available online to all members.
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'Diversity in the Washington Press Corps'
Barely 10 percent of the Washington newspaper press corps are journalists of color, according to a report by UNITY: Journalists of Color, Inc., and the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism.
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