Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Sabrina Tavernise | |
|---|---|
| Name | Sabrina Tavernise |
| Birth date | 1969 |
| Birth place | New York City, New York, U.S. |
| Alma mater | Barnard College |
| Occupation | Journalist, correspondent |
| Employer | The New York Times |
| Known for | National correspondent, foreign correspondent |
Sabrina Tavernise is an American journalist and national correspondent for The New York Times. She has built a distinguished career reporting from conflict zones and across the United States, known for her in-depth coverage of demographics, social change, and international affairs. Tavernise previously served as a longtime foreign correspondent for the newspaper, with postings in Istanbul, Baghdad, and Moscow.
Sabrina Tavernise was born in New York City and grew up in Connecticut. She developed an early interest in international affairs and storytelling. She pursued her higher education at Barnard College, the women's liberal arts college of Columbia University, where she graduated with a degree in English literature.
Tavernise began her journalism career at The Industry Standard magazine. She later worked as a reporter for The Hartford Courant before joining The New York Times in 2000. Her initial assignments included covering the September 11 attacks and their aftermath. She was subsequently posted as a foreign correspondent, first to Pakistan and Afghanistan during the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021), and then to Istanbul to report on Turkey and the broader Middle East. In 2003, she moved to Baghdad to cover the Iraq War and its turbulent aftermath, producing acclaimed reporting on the sectarian violence and human cost of the conflict.
Following her time in Iraq, Tavernise was assigned to Moscow, where she reported on Russia under Vladimir Putin, the Second Chechen War, and the country's political and social evolution. She returned to the United States in 2015, transitioning to a role as a national correspondent. In this capacity, she has written extensively on American demographics, exploring themes of population decline, rural America, political polarization, and the changing social fabric of the country. Her work often appears on the front page and in the National section of the newspaper. She is also a frequent guest on programs such as *The Daily* and NPR.
Throughout her career, Tavernise has been recognized with several prestigious awards for her journalism. Her coverage from Iraq earned her a George Polk Award for Foreign Reporting. She was part of the team from The New York Times that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Her in-depth reporting on demographic trends in America has also been widely cited and acclaimed within the media industry.
Sabrina Tavernise is married to photographer Ivor Prickett. The couple has two children and resides in Washington, D.C.. Her experiences living and reporting from numerous international posts have deeply informed her perspective on global and domestic issues.
* "As Population Growth Slows, a Sense of Crisis Grows in Rural America" – The New York Times, 2021. * "The Graying of Rural America" – The New York Times, 2019. * Extensive frontline reporting from Baghdad and Mosul during the Iraq War. * Reporting on Russian political interference and the annexation of Crimea. Category:American journalists Category:The New York Times people Category:1969 births Category:Living people