Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Founder(s) | Joe Murphy and Mike Malone |
Founded | 1970 |
Language | English and Marshallese |
Country | Marshall Islands |
Circulation | 2,000(as of 2018) |
Website | marshallislandsjournal |
The Marshall Islands Journal is a bilingual weekly newspaper published in the Marshall Islands. Founded in 1970, it is the sole newspaper in the country and has a circulation of approximately 2,000 copies each week as of 2018. It is published in English and Marshallese.
The Marshall Islands Journal was co-founded in 1970 as the Micronitor by Joe Murphy and Mike Malone, two American Peace Corps volunteers without any previous experience in journalism. Publication began in Malone's home, with the first copy released on February 13, 1970. The name changed to the Micronesian Independent and then The Marshall Islands Journal shortly afterward, and they moved into a new building, where construction had begun in 1969. Murphy became the head of the newspaper. [1]
The newspaper benefited from the lack of competition, [1] and its early criticism of Micronesian politicians and the American Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands gave it credibility among the Marshallese public. It has been especially critical of earlier American nuclear weapons tests in the Marshall Islands such as Castle Bravo. Murphy hired Giff Johnson as a reporter for the paper shortly after Johnson's immigration to the country in 1984. Johnson became editor-in-chief four months later. [2]
Murphy coined the slogan "world's worst newspaper" in the 1990s as a response to what he felt were insufficient slogans of other newspapers, bringing it international attention. The Boston Globe commented on The Marshall Islands Journal in its 1994 list of worst newspapers, describing it as "first-class". Murphy rejected this praise, saying that he "must have sent [The Boston Globe] the wrong issues". [1] The paper has covered climate change in the Marshall Islands with increasing frequency since 1992, eventually leading to weekly content on the issue. Murphy retired from the paper in 2019 as his health declined. [2]
The Marshall Islands Journal is privately owned. [3] As of 2018, it is staffed by approximately 20 people with a 60-year-old printing press. As the Marshall Islands is isolated from much of the world, The Marshall Islands Journal must order supplies such as paper several months in advance. [2] The paper is bilingual, with publications in both English and Marshallese. [4]
It had a circulation of approximately 3,000 copies weekly in 2004, [4] and 2,000 in 2018. [2] Most copies are circulated in the capital, Majuro, while many are flown to Kwajalein each week. It has an additional online subscriber readership of a few hundred readers, including several members of the United States Department of State, which uses the paper as a major source of information on the Marshall Islands. [2]
The Marshall Islands, officially the Republic of the Marshall Islands, is an island country west of the International Date Line and north of the equator in the Micronesia region in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean.
The Marshall Islands is an island country in Oceania.
The Micronesians or Micronesian peoples are various closely related ethnic groups native to Micronesia, a region of Oceania in the Pacific Ocean. They are a part of the Austronesian ethnolinguistic group, which has an Urheimat in Taiwan.
Air Marshall Islands is an airline based in Majuro, Marshall Islands. It is the flag carrier of the Marshall Islands, operating inter-island services in the Central Pacific. Its main base is Marshall Islands International Airport, Majuro.
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Leroij Atama Zedkaia was the Marshallese paramount chief, or Leroijlaplap, of Majuro. Leroij Zedkaia spearheaded the movement to break the Marshall Islands away from the rest of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands and form the independent Republic of the Marshall Islands. She was also the mother of Jurelang Zedkaia, who has served as the President of the Marshall Islands from 2009 to 2012. Leroij is a title by a female paramount chief, or Leroijlaplap, in the Marshall Islands.
Sharon Bhagwan-Rolls is a Fijian political activist of Indian descent known for political activism within the intersections of feminism, media, climate change and peace.
Women in the Marshall Islands are women who live in or are from the Republic of the Marshall Islands, an island country that is politically a presidential republic in free association with the United States. Alternative appellations for these women are Marshallese women, Marshall Islander women, Marshalls women, and women in Rālik-Ratak.
Alele Museum & Public Library is the national museum and the national archive of the Marshall Islands. It also hosts the only public library in the country.
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Giff Johnson is a Marshall Islands-based editor and journalist. He is also the author of the self-published book Don't Ever Whisper, which tells of his late wife Darlene Keju's fight to share the Marshall Islanders plight with the rest of the world. In 2013, he was interviewed by ABC Radio presenter Geraldine Coutts in relation to the book.
Hilda Cathy Heine is a Marshallese educator and politician. She has been serving as the president of the Marshall Islands since 2024, having previously served from 2016 to 2020. Heine was the first woman to lead any sovereign country in Micronesia and the first person from the Marshall Islands to earn a doctorate. Prior to entering politics, she worked as a teacher and counselor at Marshall Islands High School and then as a women's rights activist with her organization Women United Together Marshall Islands.
Casten Ned Nemra is a Marshallese politician who was President of the Marshall Islands for 17 days in January 2016. He was elected by the Nitijeļā (Parliament) as President in January 2016, following the 2015 general election, narrowly defeating Senator Alvin Jacklick, a seven-term member of Parliament, by a 17–16 vote. He was the youngest person to hold the job and the second commoner. He was ousted by a vote of no confidence after just two weeks in office by the opposition for jumping ship and joining Iroij Mike Kabua's Aelon Kein Ad party along with Senators Dennis Momotaro and Daisy-Alik Momotaro.
Yasmine Ryan was a print, television and multimedia journalist from New Zealand. She was involved in covering the Arab Spring for Al Jazeera English. Ryan also created documentaries.
Events in the year 2020 in the Marshall Islands.
Kitlang Kabua is a Marshallese politician. She was elected to the Legislature of the Marshall Islands (Nitijeļā) for Kwajalein in the 2019 Marshallese general election, receiving 931 votes. She was 28 at the time of her election, making her the youngest person ever elected to the Nitijeļā. Kabua and former President Hilda Heine were the only two women who obtained a seat. She subsequently was appointed Minister of Education, Sports and Training in the cabinet of her uncle President David Kabua. Kabua took her oath of office on 13 January 2020. The formal inauguration of the cabinet took place on 20 January.
Marshallese nationality law is regulated by the Marshallese Constitution of 1979, as amended; the 1984 Citizenship Act of the Marshall Islands, and its revisions; and international agreements entered into by the Marshallese government. These laws determine who is, or is eligible to be, a national of the Marshall Islands. The legal means to acquire nationality, formal membership in a nation, differ from the domestic relationship of rights and obligations between a national and the nation, known as citizenship. Marshallese nationality is typically obtained either on the principle of jus soli, i.e. by birth in the Marshall Islands or under the rules of jus sanguinis, i.e. by birth abroad to parents with Marshallese nationality. It can be granted to persons with an affiliation to the country, or to a permanent resident who has lived in the country for a given period of time through naturalization.
Marafetu Togakilo Smith is a weaver and community activist from Niue. She founded the first Niuean weaving group in Auckland, and her work is held in the collections of Auckland War Memorial Museum and Te Papa.
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