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Pilger, de Bary said, is seen by some as a successor to the journalistic legacy of George Orwell. "Like Orwell, he is equal parts reporter, artist, and cultural critic," she said. "His documentary films have dealt with some of the major flashpoints of global politics in the second half of the 20th century -- Vietnam, Cambodia, East Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq and, most recently, the Chagos Islands, near the site of a planned American military base in the Indian Ocean."
Pilger also has reported on Indonesia, Burma, Palestine, apartheid in South Africa and Australia's indigenous population. His factual documentaries and books challenge widely held opinions about European and U.S. foreign policy.
Pilger is a regular contributor to The Guardian, New Statesman, the Independent and Daily Mirror, as well as the BBC. For his work as a war correspondent in Vietnam, Cambodia, Egypt, India, Bangladesh and Biafra, he has twice been named Journalist of the Year, Britain's highest journalism award. He was named the 2003 Ethnic Multicultural Media Awards Media Personality of the Year. Pilger also has been awarded the United Nations' Associate Media Peace Prize and the 2003 Sophie Prize, presented by the Norwegian Minister of the Environment. His documentaries have been frequently honored, including an International Emmy Award in 1991 for "Cambodia: The Betrayal," an examination of the secret support given by Western governments to the Khmer Rouge.
The Rhodes Class of '56 University Professorships are awarded for a period of one to five years, and appointees are considered full members of the faculty. During each year of their appointment, Rhodes professors visit the campus for a minimum of two weeks. Janet Reno, former U.S. Attorney General, 1960 Cornell alumna and Rhodes professor, will revisit Cornell in November.
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