Skip to main content
Support

Deborah Amos

Guest Speaker

    Professional affiliation

    International Correspondent, NPR

    Full Biography

    Deborah Amos covers the Middle East for NPR News. Her reports can be heard on NPR's award-winning Morning EditionAll Things Considered, and Weekend Edition. In 2009, Amos won the Edward Weintal Prize for Diplomatic Reporting from Georgetown University and in 2010 was awarded the Edward R. Murrow Lifetime Achievement Award by Washington State University. Amos was part of a team of reporters who won a 2004 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for coverage of Iraq. A Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 1991-1992, Amos returned to Harvard in 2010 as a Shorenstein Fellow at the Kennedy School. In 2003, Amos returned to NPR after a decade in television news, including ABC's Nightlineand World News Tonight, and the PBS programs NOW with Bill Moyers and Frontline.

    A member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Amos is also the author of Eclipse of the Sunnis: Power, Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle East (Public Affairs, 2010) and Lines in the Sand: Desert Storm and the Remaking of the Arab World (Simon and Schuster, 1992). Amos is a Ferris Professor at Princeton, where she teaches journalism during the fall term.