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Whistleblowing While Black: How Truth-Telling Changes the Careers of Black Women in Tech
Black women whistleblowers not only jeopardize their professional prospects, experts say, but often face more intense backlash
Challenging technology to serve the public good.
Ese Olumhense is a reporter at The Markup, where she covers the ways that government agencies use technology.
Before that, she was a reporter at Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting, producing both digital and radio pieces on democracy and voting rights. A native New Yorker, Ese is also an adjunct faculty member at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, working with investigative reporting fellows there.
(Photograph by A. Retina Stewart/Studio Ars.)
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Black women whistleblowers not only jeopardize their professional prospects, experts say, but often face more intense backlash
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