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Anton Troianovski

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Anton Troianovski
Troianovski's interview on US/Russia
Антон ТрояновскийEdit this on Wikidata
Born30 May 1985Edit this on Wikidata
Moscow(Soviet Union)Edit this on Wikidata
Alma mater
OccupationJournalist,correspondentEdit this on Wikidata
Employer
Awards

Anton Sergeyevich Troianovski(Russian:Антон Сергеевич Трояновский;born 8 December 1985) is a Soviet-born American journalist. He is the Moscow bureau chief forThe New York Timesand the former Moscow bureau chief forThe Washington Post.

Early life

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Anton Troianovski was born on 8 December 1985 in Moscow, Soviet Union, into a family of biologists.[1][2][3]His father is Sergey Markovich Troianovski, son of the Soviet film director and cameramanMark Troianovski[ru;uk].[1]In 1990, Troianovski's family moved toHeidelberg,Germany,[4]and in 1994 they moved to theUnited States.[2]

Career

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His career began as a photographer for theWebster-Kirkwood Timesand theSuburban Journalsgroup inMissouri,US.[5]In June 2008, he graduated fromHarvard Universitywith a bachelor's degree insocial studies.[6][7]While at university, he was Associate Managing Editor ofThe Harvard Crimsonnewspaper.[8]In 2007, Troianovski received a travel grant from the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies for his topic "The New Generation of Russian Journalists after the Fall of Communism".[9]He was an intern atThe New Republic,Associated PressandThe Washington Post.[10][11][12]

Since 2008, he has worked forThe Wall Street Journal,where he covered topics related to real estate, telecommunications and the economy inWashingtonandNew York City.[11]From 2013 to 2017 he worked as a correspondent inBerlin,Germany.[5]

From January 2018 to July 2019, he worked as the Moscow bureau chief forThe Washington Post.[2][7]Troianovski was part of The Post's 2020Pulitzer Prize-winning team for itsclimate changereporting series.[13]

On 27 June 2019, he joinedThe New York Times,where he has been the Moscow bureau chief since January 2021. He was one of the first foreign journalists who covered the events during the2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war.[13][14][15]

References

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  1. ^ab"Марк Трояновский"[Mark Troianovski].csdfmuseum.ru(in Russian).Retrieved27 January2022.
  2. ^abcPivovarov, Alexey;Dzyadko, Tikhon(4 December 2018)."Шеф московского бюро Washington Post:" В России есть люди, которые считают, что мы агенты Госдепа ""[Washington Post Moscow Bureau Chief: "There are people in Russia who think we are agents of the State Department" ].RTVI(in Russian). Archived fromthe originalon 24 October 2021.Retrieved27 January2022.
  3. ^Yakovleva, Aitalina (12 July 2019)."Журналист" The Washington Post "о Якутии"[The Washington Post journalist about Yakutia].sakhalife.ru(in Russian).Retrieved27 January2022.
  4. ^Troianovski, Anton (16 October 2011)."Burns Fellowship 2011 Report"(PDF).International Center for Journalists.
  5. ^ab"Anton Troianovski".The New York Times.Retrieved27 January2022.
  6. ^"Graduates Weigh In: What Is the Value of a Humanities Degree?".The Wall Street Journal.19 June 2013.ISSN0099-9660.Archivedfrom the original on 11 April 2021.Retrieved27 January2022.
  7. ^ab"Anton Troianovski".The Washington Post.Retrieved27 January2022.
  8. ^"Anton S. Troianovski".The Harvard Crimson.Retrieved27 January2022.
  9. ^"Davis Center announces award winners".The Harvard Gazette.7 June 2007.Retrieved27 January2022.
  10. ^"A War Of Ideas".The New Republic.29 October 2007.ISSN0028-6583.Retrieved27 January2022.
  11. ^ab"Anton Troianovski".The Wall Street Journal.Retrieved27 January2022.
  12. ^"Anton Troianovski named The Washington Post's Moscow Bureau Chief".The Washington Post.1 November 2017.ISSN0190-8286.Retrieved27 January2022.
  13. ^ab"Two New Bureau Chiefs for International".The New York Times Company.10 November 2020.Retrieved27 January2022.
  14. ^Slackman, Michael(27 June 2019)."Anton Troianovski Joins The Times as Moscow Correspondent".The New York Times Company.Retrieved27 January2022.
  15. ^"Դաժան պատերազմի առաջնագծում. Լեռնային Ղարաբաղը The New York Times-ի լրագրողի աչքերով"[On the front lines of a brutal war: Nagorno-Karabakh through the eyes of a correspondent for The New York Times].armenpress.am(in Armenian). 18 October 2020.Retrieved27 January2022.