Lisa Armstrong is an award-winning journalist and former Center for Fiction fellow with credits in The New York Times, The Intercept, The Daily Beast, Rolling Stone, USA Today, The New Yorker, and several other websites and publications. She has reported from several countries, including Sierra Leone, Kenya, and the Philippines, and reported from Haiti from 2010 to 2014, through grants from The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and NYU. She has been featured on NPR and the BBC, discussing rape in the camps in Haiti and HIV/AIDS in the aftermath of the earthquake.
She is currently reporting on incarceration and has had grants from The Investigative Fund, The Carter Center and the Fund for Investigative Journalism/Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism to support her work. She recently wrote a story about a man who was released from prison after 47 years behind bars on a juvenile life without parole sentence and another on juvenile solitary confinement. Armstrong also directed Little Lost Boy, a documentary about a young man who was incarcerated in an adult prison when he was 16 that premiered in May 2017 and was featured in the Social Impact track at SXSW 2018. Armstrong is an associate professor at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism.
Portrait photo courtesy artist.
She is currently reporting on incarceration and has had grants from The Investigative Fund, The Carter Center and the Fund for Investigative Journalism/Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism to support her work. She recently wrote a story about a man who was released from prison after 47 years behind bars on a juvenile life without parole sentence and another on juvenile solitary confinement. Armstrong also directed Little Lost Boy, a documentary about a young man who was incarcerated in an adult prison when he was 16 that premiered in May 2017 and was featured in the Social Impact track at SXSW 2018. Armstrong is an associate professor at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism.
Portrait photo courtesy artist.