Kate Stohr is an American journalist,[1] data scientist and civic activist based near San Francisco, CA. She was the director of a Data Science initiative at Simon & Schuster. She founded 99 Antennas. In 2016 she covered the U.S. Presidential Elections as a data journalist with Fusion [2] and noted for her coverage of the online dominance of the Trump candidacy[3] and for her reporting on the racial inequality in US prosecutor elections [4]
In 1999 she co-founded Architecture for Humanity with Cameron Sinclair, a humanitarian architecture and design organization that focused on designing and building housing for people suffering from environmental disasters, refugee camps and other people in need. She was managing director of the organization until May 2013.[5][6]
In 2006, Sinclair and Stohr published a compendium on socially conscious design, titled Design Like You Give A Damn: Architectural Responses to Humanitarian Crises (May 2006, Metropolis Books).[5] In 2012 they released the follow-up, titled Design Like You Give A Damn [2]: Building Change From The Ground Up (May 2012, Abrams Books).
As a result of the 2006 TED Prize along with Sinclair, Stohr developed and launched the Open Architecture Network, the world's first open source community dedicated to improving living conditions through innovative and sustainable design.[7] In 2012 the Open Architecture Network merged with Worldchanging to expand its work to both the built and natural environment.
In August 2008 Stohr was named as joint recipient of the Design Patron Award for the 2008 National Design Awards.[8] In 2009 Stohr was awarded the Bicentenary Medal of the Royal Society of Arts for increasing people's resourcefulness.
References
edit- ^ Kate Stohr
- ^ Kate Stohr, December 2016
- ^ Why Donald Trump Was The Perfect Candidate for Facebook, February 2018
- ^ How To Rig An Election, 2016
- ^ a b "INTERVIEW: We Talk to Architecture for Humanity's Co-Founder Kate Stohr". Retrieved 2018-04-14.
- ^ "Cameron Sinclair and Kate Stohr, co-founders of Architecture for Humanity, to step down and help form a five-year strategic vision". Archinect. Retrieved 2018-04-14.
- ^ Scanlon, Jessie (15 March 2007), Open-Source Goes Hammer and Nail, BusinessWeek
- ^ Architecture for Humanity Selected as Design Patron Award Winner in Cooper-Hewitt's Ninth Annual National Design Awards, 12 August 2008