Jump to the Nina Mason Pulliam Award rules
1. NAME AND PURPOSE: The Society of Environmental Journalists Awards for Reporting on the Environment honor the year's most outstanding journalism on environmental subjects.
2. GOVERNANCE: Annually, at its January meeting, the SEJ Board of Directors will appoint an Awards Committee consisting of at least three people, as well as a non-voting board liaison, each of whom will serve one-year terms. The committee must always have an odd number of members to avoid evenly split votes, and the board must appoint a replacement if there is a mid-year vacancy. The Awards Committee works with the awards director to establish, amend and interpret contest rules, appoint judges and screeners, and administer the contest. Judging panels are appointed to contest categories by the Awards Committee and the director, and are responsible for choosing place-winners from entries that comply with contest rules. The awards director is responsible for day-to-day administration of the contest, in consultation with the Awards Committee. Only the judging panels may select the contest winners, not the Awards Committee or the SEJ board, staff or awards personnel. Members of the Awards Committee, however, may serve as screeners to narrow the number of entries to be submitted to the judges.
3. PRIZES: First-place winners receive $500, a trophy and an electronic banner in all categories. Winners of second place receive $250 and an electronic banner. Third place and honorable mentions receive an electronic banner. Winners and honorable mentions in all categories receive discounts on conference registration fees. Only two individuals on a winning team will receive cash awards. They are of course free to share their winnings with others on the team. Winners of cash prizes must work within SEJ's payment structures (currently bill.com and PayPal) to receive payment.
4. ELIGIBLE ENTRANTS: All journalists may enter, but SEJ board of directors, Awards Committee, SEJ staff or awards personnel may not enter their own work. Entrants who were enrolled in a university, college or high school at the time the entry was published or aired are eligible to enter the student journalism contest. Mid-career journalists who return to school, post-graduate students and students sharing a byline with non-students are not eligible for the student category. Judges may enter, but not in a category in which they are judging.
5. ELIGIBLE SUBJECTS: Only journalism that is predominantly about an environmental subject is eligible for the contest. See category descriptions to determine what type of environmental story is eligible for each category. The Awards Committee is the final authority for determining whether an entered story meets that standard.
6. ELIGIBLE ENTRIES: Only journalism that is published or broadcast in a media outlet accessible to the general public — including cable or online content — may be entered in the contest. The original release date, except in the case of the Book Award (see below), must be during the 13-month period from April 1, 2023 through April 30, 2024. Series that begin or end during the designated contest period qualify in their entirety (limit five parts), but may only be entered in one contest year. Related stories published or aired on the same day count as one story. Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible; republished or rebroadcast stories are not eligible.
Stories entered in the student category must be published or aired between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024, in a media outlet accessible to the general public, including campus media. This can include journalism produced during internships and part-time jobs. Class assignments not published, posted or broadcast to the public are not eligible. Stories or projects produced by SEJ are not eligible. Work published in web logs or personal websites is eligible, as long as the site is accessible to the general public.
Books must have a copyright number acquired during the calendar year directly preceding the contest deadline, i.e., January 1 - December 31, 2023, for the contest closing June 17, 2024 (July 1 with late fee). Books published in English for the first time during the contest year that were previously published in another language are eligible. Republished versions are not eligible.
7. A cover letter is mandatory. It may be submitted by the reporter entering the contest or any other individual, and should help judges understand difficulties the reporter faced, impacts of the story or other information that would interest judges. It can be typed in, pasted in or uploaded as a file.
8. NON-ENGLISH ENTRIES: Entries in languages other than English must be accompanied by a complete and accurate English translation.
9. GROUP ENTRIES: In addition to individuals, groups may enter as a team, except in the beat reporting categories where only a single journalist with a small supporting team of up to three, such as a photographer, graphic artist or small video team, may be included. Only individuals or groups of individuals may enter — not publications, stations or other corporate entities. Reporters with bylines must be included in the reporting team. Photographers, graphic artists and reporters who contributed to the story but were not given bylines may be included in the reporting team in all categories except beat reporting and the book category. In all categories, if a team is awarded prize money, the cash award will be sent to the primary reporter, or to the winning reporter’s media outlet, for distribution. (The “primary reporter” is identified for purposes of processing the entry only, and is not equated with having a special journalistic role in the entry.) SEJ may, for budgetary reasons, choose to limit the number of individual certificates or other materials presented to winning group entries.
10. CATEGORIES: The categories for the contest are as follows:
Kevin Carmody Award for Outstanding Investigative Reporting, Large: An investigative report or series on a single environmental topic, originally published or aired between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Investigative reporting uses journalistic skills to disclose facts about businesses, government agencies or individuals that, absent the reporting, would not likely be disclosed. Judges will be encouraged to weigh the results of the reporting in their deliberations. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with more than 100 employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: National networks in the U.S. and elsewhere and top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Kevin Carmody Award for Outstanding Investigative Reporting, Small: An investigative report or series on a single environmental topic, originally published or aired between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Investigative reporting uses journalistic skills to disclose facts about businesses, government agencies or other people that, absent the reporting, would not likely be disclosed. Judges will be encouraged to weigh the results of the reporting in their deliberations. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with 100 or fewer employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: Below top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Beat Reporting, Large: Three to five broadcast or published news reports and/or commentary on a broad range of environmental topics or a broad range of various issues within a single environmental topic published or aired between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024, may be submitted. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story. Entry must be the work of three bylines maximum, plus a photographer, graphics artist or other individual vital to the development of the stories.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with more than 100 employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: National networks in the U.S. and elsewhere and top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Freelancers: Enter your stories in large outlets into this (Beat Large) category.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Beat Reporting, Small: Three to five broadcast or published news reports and/or commentary on a broad range of environmental topics or a broad range of various issues within a single environmental topic published or aired between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024, may be submitted. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story. Entry must be the work of three bylines maximum, plus a photographer, graphics artist or other individual vital to the development of the stories.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with 100 or fewer employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: Below top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Freelancers: Enter your stories in small outlets into this (Beat Small) category.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Explanatory Reporting, Large: A story, series or occasional series that illuminates a significant, complex environmental subject, demonstrating mastery of the subject, storytelling and clear presentation, published or aired by a single news organization. Entries must be published between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with more than 100 employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: National networks in the U.S. and elsewhere and top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Explanatory Reporting, Small: A story, series or occasional series that illuminates a significant, complex environmental subject, demonstrating mastery of the subject, storytelling and clear presentation, published or aired by a single news organization. Entries must be published between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with 100 or fewer employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: Below top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Feature Story, Large: Entry must be a single environmental interest story not directly tied to a recent news event, with an emphasis on storytelling. Entries must be published between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Multi-part stories are prohibited.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with more than 100 employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: National networks in the U.S. and elsewhere and top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: A recorded story's total run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Feature Story, Small: Entry must be a single environmental interest story not directly tied to a recent news event, with an emphasis on storytelling. Entries must be published between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Multi-part stories are prohibited.
Eligibility:
- Print or online entries: News organizations with 100 or fewer employees (including all who support production, directly or indirectly). If an entry was produced with external resources — contractors, freelancers, etc. — that number must be included when determining size.
- TV and audio: Below top 50 television and top 100 audio markets in the U.S. and in equivalent markets outside the U.S.
- Run Time: A recorded story's total run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Small-newsroom entities collaborating with large-newsroom entities qualify as large-newsroom.
- Only stories published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible. Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Outstanding Student Reporting: A story or series on an environmental topic by a student or group of students enrolled in a university, college or high school at the time the content was produced. Entry stories must have been published, aired or otherwise produced in a media outlet accessible to the general public between April 1, 2023 and April 30, 2024. Up to five stories are allowed. Related stories and sidebars published the same day count as one story.
Eligibility:
- All audio, TV, print and online content published or aired by the original media outlet are eligible, including campus media and journalism produced during undergraduate internships and student-held part-time jobs.
- Run Time: Recorded stories' total combined run time must not exceed 60 minutes.
- Class assignments not published, posted or broadcast to the public aren't eligible.
- Stories with bylines shared with non-students and work from post-graduate internships aren't eligible.
- Work from mid-career journalists who have worked five or more years as full-time professional journalists before returning to school aren't eligible.
- Republished or rebroadcast stories aren't eligible.
- Online stories edited or altered after April 30, 2024 aren't eligible.
Rachel Carson Environment Book Award: A nonfiction book that covers an environmental topic. The copyright date must be in 2023 and the book must be available to the general public.
Eligibility:
- Republished books aren't eligible, even if substantially altered. EXCEPTION: Books published in English for the first time during the contest year that were previously published in another language are eligible.
- Memoirs and picture books aren't eligible.
- Proofing copies aren't eligible.
- Photojournalism books that tell an environmental story through images and text are eligible.
- Four books are required for entry. See shipping info. If your entry wins first place, three more copies are required for judges of the $10,000 Nina Mason Pulliam Award for Outstanding Environmental Reporting.
11. MULTIPLE ENTRIES: Individuals or groups may enter the contest multiple times, in the same category or in different categories, but stories you already entered once may not be entered again. Each entry must be submitted separately with a separate entry fee payable at the time of submission.
12. ENTRY FEE: In all categories (except Student) SEJ members in good standing, or teams that include at least one SEJ member in good standing who has a byline or other significant role in the entry, pay SEJ a fee of $45 per entry. Discounted entry fee of $10 may be used by journalists residing in low-to-middle-income-economy countries as designated by World Bank rankings. Nonmembers who do not wish to join pay $110 per entry. A group or team entry pays the same fee as individual entry. Nonmembers who wish to join SEJ for the first time, and who qualify, must first apply for membership and pay their first-year discount member dues ($40), then log in to enter at the member rate. Eligibility standards must be met. If a membership application is declined, the applicant will be billed to make up the nonmember rate and the member dues will be refunded. (Paid dues cannot be applied to contest fees.) Applicants should be aware of membership eligibility criteria before applying for membership. (Information about membership and joining.) SEJ student members pay no entry fee if they enter by June 17; June 18-July 1, entry fee is $25. Non-member students pay $25 per entry through June 17; June 18-July 1, entry fee is $50. Late entries must be submitted by July 1, 2024, 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time. Cost as listed above will be doubled. Entry fees are not refundable.
Reminder: SEJ membership must be current to access the SEJ member rate. If membership dues or awards fees pose a barrier, current or lapsed members can request a fee-waiver from the SEJ Members in Need fund. If you'd like to help, you can make a donation to the fund here.
13. ENTRY DEADLINE: June 17, 2024, 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time. Books or hard copies must be postmarked no later than June 17, 2024 and an online form must be completed by that deadline. Late entry deadline (with additional fee) is July 1, 2024, 11:59 p.m. ET. Late entries that are mailed must be postmarked no later than July 1, 2024, and an online entry form must be completed by July 1, 2024, 11:59 p.m. ET.
14. SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS:
Broadcast and online entries may be submitted as viable website links to stories on a website maintained by the entrant or publisher of the entry. Television and audio links must yield good quality visual and audio replay. All broadcast entries must include a complete transcript.
Print entries may be submitted as viable web links where the entry is viewable on a website maintained by the entrant or publisher of the entry, or by uploading PDFs.
Online or uploaded files must match the original aired, published or posted entry, with all graphics, headlines and photos included (where applicable), with the exception of newswires who do not maintain their own hosted website. Such newswires may submit computer printouts saved as PDFs.
Online entries may not include updates posted after the contest cutoff date of April 30, 2024.
Book entries must be submitted as initially published: hardbound, paperbound or electronic. Computer printouts, proofing copies and republished versions will not be accepted. For electronic publications, access instructions must be included and costs associated with access provided.
In all cases, if uploads and links are not possible, contact sej@sej.org.
15. COMPLETENESS OF ENTRY: An entry will be considered complete and eligible for judging if it 1) complies with the contest rules; 2) includes the correct entry fee; 3) includes a submitted electronic entry form including links or uploaded files of all pertinent stories or productions and does not contain stories that were previously submitted. If electronic links and uploads are not possible, contact sej@sej.org. Some entrants may also be asked to provide documentation demonstrating that they are eligible for the category they are entering.
16. INCOMPLETE OR NON-COMPLYING ENTRIES: The awards director, Awards Committee or the committee chair or co-chairs may disqualify entries that are incomplete, illegible (such as exceptionally small type or poor photocopying) or otherwise do not comply with the contest rules. In cases where the awards director or Awards Committee determines that an entry is substantially but not fully complete, the entrant may be contacted and given extra time to provide any missing copies or other required information after the regular entry deadline. Entry fees will not be refunded to disqualified entrants.
17. DISCLOSURE: Any material corrections or retractions following the original distribution of the work, as well as any conflicts of interest or any appearance of a conflict of interest, must be disclosed on the entry form. Failure to do so will result in the disqualification of the entry.
18. CATEGORY SWITCHES: The SEJ Awards Committee and/or awards director may notify the entrant to switch entries to a different category if the entry was deemed incorrectly classified.
19. ANNOUNCEMENT OF WINNERS: Winners will be announced as soon as possible after judges have completed their deliberations and winners have been notified. This usually takes 3-4 weeks.
20. DISPLAYING AND ARCHIVING WINNERS: Copies of place-winning stories will be retained as an archive by SEJ and may be reproduced on the SEJ website and in SEJ publications at SEJ's discretion.
21. RULES CHANGES: Working in consultation with the awards director, the Awards Committee by majority vote may amend the contest rules prior to the call for entries, including modifying the categories, award amounts and entry fees. The contest's budget, however, must always remain within the limits established by the SEJ executive director and the board of directors.
22. POSTING OF RULES: Contest rules are posted on the public portion of the SEJ website. The names and affiliations of the Awards Committee members will also be posted there.
JUDGES AND JUDGING
1. APPOINTMENT OF JUDGES: For each contest category, the Awards Committee each year will appoint a panel of at least three judges for each contest category, including a panel chairperson responsible for making sure the panel follows the rules, meets the judging deadline and writes or collects from fellow judges citations for the place-winners. Citations must be passed to the awards director. Each panel must have an odd number of judges to avoid evenly split votes. At its discretion, the Awards Committee may appoint the same judge or judging panels to select winners in more than one category. All judges will be selected before the contest deadline, and preferably earlier.
2. SCREENERS: The committee may appoint at least two screeners per category to narrow the number of entries for consideration by the judges. Committee members may serve as screeners. Screeners must follow the same conflict-of-interest requirements as judges.
3. QUALIFICATIONS FOR JUDGING AND SCREENING: All judges and screeners must be either news professionals or journalism educators, or have similar qualifications the Awards Committee considers appropriate. Judges and screeners must read and familiarize themselves with the contest rules and abide by them. Members of the SEJ Awards Committee, the SEJ governing board, SEJ staff and awards personnel may not serve as judges or screeners. Judges and screeners serve as volunteers.
4. REMOVAL AND REPLACEMENT OF JUDGES: The Awards Committee will appoint a replacement for any judge unable or unwilling to follow the contest rules or otherwise fulfill their obligations as a judge in the contest. Mere disagreement with a judge's selection of a winner is not grounds for removal by the Awards Committee. If the Awards Committee determines that a judge it has selected is not qualified, the committee will name a replacement.
5. JUDGE/SCREENER RECUSALS: Judges and screeners must recuse themselves from decisions or in any way discussing entries from their own news organizations. (This does not apply to organizations that share a common corporate ownership but are managed separately, such as newspapers or stations in different cities that are owned by the same corporate parent, unless they are part of a single news network.) Whenever a judge or screener is uncertain whether a recusal should occur, they will contact the awards director or the Awards Committee, who will determine whether a recusal is appropriate. Judges and screeners who have recused themselves from deciding on an entry may participate in deciding the other entries in the same category. However, if a judging or screening panel determines that, because of a recusal, it cannot reach a decision on a given entry, the Awards Committee may replace the recused judge or screener for that entry.
6. JUDGING/SCREENING PROCESS: Judging and screening panels use SEJ’s online awards site to access and rate entries. Judges meet via phone or computer conferencing or email to make final selections of place-winners and honorable mentions. The chairperson of each panel is responsible for selecting dates and times for meeting that are convenient for the entire panel. Judges and screeners may not discuss contest entries with anyone outside their panel, and may not discuss entries with other panel members unless the entire panel is participating in the discussion. Judges and screeners will use their own judgment in determining which entries constitute the most outstanding journalism on environmental subjects in their categories. At its discretion, the Awards Committee may, at the beginning of the judging/screening process, provide all of the contest's judges and screeners with standardized, non-binding guidelines to help them evaluate entries. Judges and screeners must consider the entered stories and the supplemental materials in judging or screening an entry, and also must keep in mind the value of entries from smaller media outlets with fewer resources as compared with that of larger and more lucrative outlets.
7. QUESTIONS FROM JUDGES: Judges will contact the awards director or the Awards Committee if they have questions about interpreting the rules of the contest, including whether an entry is in the correct category or whether a story is on an environmental subject. The Awards Committee, by majority vote, has the final authority to interpret the rules of the contest and will advise the judges accordingly. The committee's role in those cases is strictly limited to interpreting the contest rules and may not include expressing a preference for any particular entry.
8. NUMBER OF WINNERS: The judges may select up to three ranked place-winners and three honorable mentions in each category. Judges are free to select fewer or no place-winners or honorable mentions if they believe no entries are deserving of the honors. Ties are not allowed. No more than six entrants may be honored per category.
9. DISPUTES: Judging panels will make every reasonable effort to reach a consensus in selecting place-winners. If there remains a split decision on any place-winners, the majority rules. If a member of a judging panel believes a fellow judge is not following the rules of the contest, the complaining judge may contact the Awards Committee, who will determine whether the contest rules are being violated. Judging panels' selections of place-winners are final except in extraordinary cases in which the Awards Committee determines that the contest rules have been violated. The Awards Committee may not overturn a judging panel's decision merely because the committee believes another entry is more worthy. The committee may act only if by majority vote it determines that the judging process violated the contest rules or that a place-winning entry must be disqualified for failing to comply with the rules. In that extraordinary case, the judging panel will promptly reconvene and make another selection. Under no circumstances will the Awards Committee, the SEJ board of directors, the SEJ staff or awards personnel select winners or honorable mentions.
10. CITATIONS FOR WINNING ENTRIES: The judging chairperson will write, or collect from fellow panel judges, brief statements (at least one paragraph each) explaining why the place-winning entries are worthy of special recognition. These citations must be reviewed and approved in writing by all members of the judging panel, and then sent to the awards director. The comments are published by SEJ when the winners are publicly announced.
11. JUDGING DEADLINE: All judging panels must make their final decision by the deadline set by the awards director. By that date, the chairperson of each panel must inform the awards director of the panel's decision and send the director the citations for the winning entries. All judges on each panel must independently communicate their agreement with the panel's decision. The awards director will then review all the place-winning entries and honorable mentions with the committee chairperson(s) to ensure that they comply with contest rules.
12. CONFIDENTIALITY: Judges must never divulge any information about their deliberations, including their evaluation of individual entries, except to inform the awards director about which entries are award recipients and to transmit the citations for the prize-winning entries. The only exception is that under extraordinary circumstances judges may be asked by the Awards Committee to discuss their deliberations with the awards director and/or committee, but only if the awards director or committee believes that information will help them make a determination on whether the judging process or a particular entry violates the contest rules. In that case, the awards director and/or Awards Committee will also keep that information strictly confidential.
THE NINA MASON PULLIAM AWARD
1. NAME AND PURPOSE: The Nina Mason Pulliam Award will honor the "best of the best" of the Society of Environmental Journalists Awards for Reporting on the Environment by selecting one entry from the first-place SEJ Award winners in 2024 and one honorable mention.
2. PRIZE: The winner will receive $10,000 and a trophy, as well as full registration, travel and lodging to attend SEJ's 2025 conference (up to $2,500) in Arizona.
3. ELIGIBLE ENTRANTS: First-place winners of the current year SEJ Awards for Reporting on the Environment are eligible and automatically entered. First-place winner of SEJ's Rachel Carson Environment Book Award will have to supply three more copies of printed books to be eligible for the Nina Mason Pulliam Award, unless the book is published electronically. First-place winners in other categories that were entered as hard copies will have to supply three more hard copies of the entries: print, CDs or DVDs.
4. DISCLOSURE OF WINNERS: The winner will be announced at a journalism event in Washington, D.C., to be determined in December 2024.
5. DISPLAYING AND ARCHIVING WINNERS: A copy of the place-winning entry will be retained as an archive by SEJ and may be reproduced on the SEJ website and in SEJ publications at SEJ's discretion. SEJ further grants to the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust or its designee a nonexclusive, irrevocable, fully transferable, worldwide license to publish excerpts of the winning entry. The Trust’s publication of such excerpts may be in all media of expression now known or later developed for the furtherance of the Trust’s nonprofit purposes (including, without limitation, in the Trust’s annual, periodic or special reports, its website and its brochures, guidelines, requests for proposals and other materials).
6. NUMBER OF WINNERS: The judges will select a single winner and one honorable mention. Ties are not allowed.
7. GOVERNANCE: The Nina Mason Pulliam Award is made possible by a grant from The Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust and managed in collaboration with the Society of Environmental Journalists. SEJ's Awards Committee is responsible for establishing, amending and interpreting the contest rules and appointing judges. Judging panels are responsible for choosing the winner and honorable mention from the place-winners of SEJ's Awards for Reporting on the Environment. Only the judging panel may select the contest winners, not the Awards Committee or the board, SEJ staff or awards personnel or the board or staff of the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
JUDGES AND JUDGING
1. APPOINTMENT OF JUDGES: The awards director, with the help of the Awards Committee, will appoint a panel of at least three judges, including a panel chairperson responsible for making sure the panel follows the rules, meets the judging deadline and writes citations for the winner and honorable mention. The panel must have an odd number of judges to avoid evenly split votes. All judges will be selected before regular judging is completed, and preferably earlier.
2. QUALIFICATIONS FOR JUDGING: All judges must be either news professionals or journalism educators, or have similar qualifications the Awards Committee considers appropriate. Judges must read and familiarize themselves with the contest rules and abide by them. Members of the SEJ Awards Committee, the SEJ governing board, SEJ staff and awards personnel, and the board or staff of the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust may not serve as judges. Judges serve as volunteers.
3. REMOVAL AND REPLACEMENT OF JUDGES: The awards director, with the help of the Awards Committee, will appoint a replacement for any judge unable or unwilling to follow the contest rules or otherwise fulfill their obligations as a judge in the contest. Mere disagreement with a judge's selection of a winner is not grounds for removal by the Awards Committee. If the Awards Committee determines that a judge it has selected is not qualified, the committee will name a replacement.
4. JUDGE RECUSALS: Judges must recuse themselves from judging or in any way discussing all entries from their own news organizations. (This does not apply to organizations that share a common corporate ownership but are managed separately, such as newspapers or stations in different cities that are owned by the same corporate parent.) Whenever a judge is uncertain whether a recusal should occur, the judge will contact the Awards Committee, who will determine whether a recusal is appropriate. A judge who has recused theirself from judging an entry may participate in judging the other first-place winners in the running for the Pulliam Award. However, if a judging panel determines that, because of a recusal, it cannot reach a decision on selecting the Pulliam winner, the awards director, with the help of the Awards Committee, may replace the recused judge.
5. JUDGING PROCESS: The judging panel must meet via phone or computer conferencing and/or email to select the winner. The chairperson is responsible for selecting dates and times for judging that are convenient for the entire panel. Judges may not discuss contest entries with anyone outside their judging panel, and may not discuss entries with other panel members unless the entire panel is participating in the discussion. Judges will use their own judgment in determining which entry constitutes the most outstanding journalism on environmental subjects. At its discretion, the Awards Committee may, at the beginning of the judging process, provide all of the contest's judges with standardized, non-binding guidelines to help judges evaluate entries. Judges must consider the entered stories and the supplemental materials in judging an entry and also must keep in mind the value of entries from smaller media outlets with fewer resources as compared with that of larger and more lucrative outlets.
6. QUESTIONS FROM JUDGES: Judges will contact the awards director or the Awards Committee if they have questions about interpreting the rules of the contest. The Awards Committee, by majority vote, has the final authority to interpret the rules of the contest and will advise the judges accordingly. The committee's role in those cases is strictly limited to interpreting the contest rules and may not include expressing a preference for any particular entry.
7. DISPUTES: Judging panels will make every reasonable effort to reach a consensus in selecting the winner. In case of a split decision, the majority rules. If a member of the judging panel believes a fellow judge is not following the rules of the contest, the complaining judge may contact the awards director or the Awards Committee, who will determine whether the contest rules are being violated. The judging panel selections of a winner are final except in the extraordinary case in which the Awards Committee determines that the contest rules have been violated. The Awards Committee may not overturn a judging panel's decision merely because the committee believes another entry is more worthy. The committee may act only if by majority vote it determines that the judging process violated the contest rules or that a place-winning entry must be disqualified for failing to comply with the rules. In that extraordinary case, the judging panel will promptly reconvene and make another selection. Under no circumstances will the Awards Committee, the SEJ board of directors, the SEJ staff or awards personnel, or board or staff of the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust select the winner.
8. CITATION FOR WINNING ENTRY: The judging chairperson will write or collect from fellow judges a statement (at least one paragraph) explaining why the winner is worthy of special recognition. The citation must be reviewed and approved in writing by all members of the judging panel, and then sent to the awards director. The comments will be published when the winner is publicly announced.
9. JUDGING DEADLINE: The judging panel must make its final decision by the deadline set by the awards director. The chairperson must inform the awards director of the panel's decision and send the director the citation for the winning entry and honorable mention. All judges on the panel must independently communicate their agreement with the panel's decision.
10. CONFIDENTIALITY: Judges must never divulge any information about their deliberations, including their evaluation of individual entries, except to inform the Awards Committee about which entry has been selected and to transmit the citation for the prize-winning entry. The only exception is that under extraordinary circumstances judges may be asked by the Awards Committee to discuss their deliberations with the awards director and/or committee, but only if the awards director or committee believes that information will help them make a determination on whether the judging process or a particular entry violates the contest rules. In that case, the awards director and/or Awards Committee will also keep that information strictly confidential.
Updated January 2019, March 2019, January 2020, January 2021, January 2022, January 2023, December 2023