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Robert Rosenthal

Board Member, Executive Producer, Acting CEO, The Center for Investigative Reporting (CIR)

Eradicate Hate:
2021, 2022

Robert Rosenthal has been a journalist for six decades.  He is currently on the boards or an advisor to nonprofits including The Center for Investigative Reporting and the Human Rights Center at Berkeley.  Now Rosenthal is on the board of the Center for Investigative Reporting.  He was CIR’s executive director from 2008 until 2017.  When Rosenthal joined CIR it had a staff of 7.  When he stepped down as Executive Director CIR had a staff of over 70 and was widely recognized for the quality and credibility of its journalism and its constant innovation around storytelling and distribution.  Rosenthal spent the bulk of his nearly 50 year career in journalism at The Philadelphia Inquirer, starting as a reporter, and a foreign correspondent and becoming its executive editor in 1998.  He became managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle in 2002.  Before joining the Inquirer in 1979, Rosenthal worked as a reporter for The Boston Globe and The New York Times, where he was a news assistant on the foreign desk and an editorial assistant on the Pulitzer Prize-winning Pentagon Papers project.  As a reporter, Rosenthal won numerous reporting awards and was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in international reporting.  In 2018 Rosenthal was named a Fellow of the Society of Professional Journalists for his “extraordinary contribution to the profession of journalism.”

eradicate hate logo

The effort to eradicate hate requires the active participation of every component of our society, to include governments, the private sector, communities of faith and indeed every aspect of civil society. There is no more urgent task in front of us. The organizers of the Eradicate Hate Global Summit are doing the United States and the world an enormous service by tackling hatred and extremism with a focus on honest dialogue and conversation, genuine learning and practical solutions. This will not happen overnight, but the Pittsburgh community’s leadership in this effort is genuinely inspiring and motivating.

Nick Rasmussen
Nicholas Rasmussen Counterterrorism Coordinator, Department of Homeland Security