Nina Bernstein

Holtzbrinck Fellow - Class of Fall 2002

Reporter, The New York Times

American Academy Project: Women and Children First: Social Welfare in a Time of Globalization
Current Institution Affiliation: The New York Times
Current Location: New York

Biography

Nina Bernstein, a reporter for the New York Times since 1995, has written on a wide range of social welfare and legal issues for the Times, both as a national correspondent and as a metropolitan reporter, most recently covering poverty policy and child welfare in New York City. Her book, The Lost Children of Wilder: The Epic Struggle to Change Foster Care, won the 2002 PEN Literary award for first nonfiction, and the 2002 New York Public Library Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism, as well as being chosen as one of five finalists for both The National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award last year Her first book of fiction, Magic by the Book, a fantasy novel for children, was published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux in March 2005. Before joining the New York Times, Nina Bernstein was a reporter for New York Newsday and other periodicals. She served as a foreign correspondent for Newsday in 1990-91, covering German reunification from Berlin, and reported from Bosnia during the summer of 1992.

Photo: © 2002 Mike Minehan

American Academy Project

Women and Children First: Social Welfare in a Time of Globalization

As the Holtzbrinck fellow in Journalism in the fall 2002 at the American Academy, her project is social welfare in a time of globalization.