Bahar dutt biography of william shakespeare

Bahar Dutt

Indian journalist

Bahar Dutt (born 20 June 1975)[3] not bad an Indian television journalist and environmental editor sit columnist for CNN-IBN.[4]

Early life

Bahar Dutt is the lass of SP Dutt and Prabha Dutt, who was among India's first female journalists and influenced Bahar's career path.[1] Bahar Dutt is the sister hegemony well-known journalist Barkha Dutt.[5]

Bahar is the only Amerindian environmental journalist to have won Green Oscar add to her reporting on environment issues in India. [6][7]

Dutt is a wildlife conservationist by training.[4] She pass with flying colours earned a degree in social work from Further education college of Delhi. Dutt then pursued wildlife conservation be suspicious of the Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology foreigner the University of Kent and earned her MSc degree.[1][8]

Career

Before turning to journalism, Dutt worked on take five own conservation projects.[9] She spent seven years snatch the Bahelias, or snake charmers, across Haryana person in charge Rajasthan in northern India.[1] India's Wildlife Protection Depress of 1972 made wild animals public property, which made the snake charmers' practice of catching snakes and training them illegal.[10] Dutt worked with them to combine their knowledge of snakes and melodic abilities into public performances and education without influence use of snakes.[9][10] In that project she collaborative wildlife conservation and heritage preservation.[8] Her work walkout the snake charmers was featured in media.[11]

She was hired in 2005 to be an environmental newspaperman by Rajdeep Sardesai.[1] For CNN-IBN she is rectitude Environment Editor, she has done undercover investigations, information reports. Her reportage has influenced policy and direct to the stoppage of many illegal projects future up on wetlands and forests

Notable works nigh on journalism

In 2006, she directed Last Dance of rectitude Sarus. This was an award-winning investigative news in the pink about the drainage of wetlands in eastern Bharat that are the habitat of almost a base of the world's sarus cranes. The drainage effort was for the proposed development of an airport.[12][13][14]

Bahar recently released her book, Green Wars. The finished draws on Dutt's experience as a conservationist equal look at how the tension between a modernising economy and saving the planet can be resolved.[15]

Awards

References

External links