
Jenn Thornhill Verma
Jenn Thornhill Verma is an investigative journalist and Pulitzer Ocean Reporting Fellow known for her in-depth reporting on environmental issues and their impact on indigenous communities. Her work often highlights the intersection of climate change and social justice, particularly focusing on how marginalized groups adapt to and combat the effects of a warming world. In a recent story, she reported from the northeastern Labrador Inuit community of Nunatsiavut, where she documented the voices of Inuk elders and their innovative approaches to confronting climate change.
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Recent news mentions
Journalist Jenn Thornhill Verma took The Decibel to Nunatsiavut to see how elders are adapting.
Who owns Greenland? All of us, and none of us, Inuit sayJenn Thornhill Verma is an environmental journalist who has been reporting on the plight of the North Atlantic right whale.
Whales, extinction and the sounds of underwater noise pollutionInvestigative journalist Jenn Thornhill Verma took The Decibel to Nunatsiavut to see how elders are adapting to climate change.
For Canadian Rangers in the Arctic, help is far away – and talk of a Golden Dome even more soJenn Thornhill Verma is a journalist who spoke about her travels in Nunatsiavut and the adaptations of the Inuit.
India’s boiling climate could make tea more expensive – and reshape global tradeJenn Thornhill Verma is a journalist who participated in conversations about the power of photography to spur change at a Globe and Mail event.
Photography brings threats to oceans into focusJenn Thornhill Verma is an investigative journalist and Pulitzer Ocean Reporting Fellow who reports on the northeastern Labrador Inuit community.
How Labrador Inuit are adapting to a warming world























