[12] Past judges on the judging panel include Wesley Lowery (2018-2024), Katherine Boo (2022-2024), Hannah Allam (2018, 2019, 2021, 2022), Stephanie Foo (2020, 2023, 2024), Sam Freedman (2019, 2020), Farai Chideya (2023), Cindi Leive (2022), Mirta Ojito (2019, 2021), Sewell Chan (2024), Rose Arce (2024), Alexis Madrigal (2024), and Antonia Hylton (2019-2024), among others.
[46] In February 2023, David aired a 6-minute story on ESPN’s Outside the Lines/SportsCenter on the Orangeburg Massacre: an event from 1968 involving athletes in the civil rights movement, when police shot 31 Black students on the campus of South Carolina State College and killed three young men.
[47] In January 2022, Valeria was named a Fellow for the Emerson Collective to launch Altavoz Lab, a collaborative project within palabra.
[53] He will conduct visual research on how hostile environments, water, and air are impacting Latino communities across the American West.
[59] The second season of Rebecca Nagle's podcast series “This Land,” for which she won the Prize in 2020, was released at the end of August 2021.
[60] The podcast's second season focused on how the far right is using Native children to quietly dismantle American Indian tribes and advance a conservative agenda.
[62] Additionally, in April 2022, Rebecca Nagle co-authored the article “Where Is Oklahoma Getting Its Numbers From in Its Supreme Court Case?” in The Atlantic with Allison Herrera.
[65] Julian Brave NoiseCat is currently working on a book, "We Survived the Night", which will be published by Knopf and is an account of contemporary Indigenous life in the U.S. and Canada woven together with a personal narrative.
[67] In August 2022, Julian published "Z’s coming out: At a two-spirit powwow in Toronto, my niece grapples with identity" in Canada's National Observer.
[70] National Geographic will show the documentary at global festivals throughout the rest of 2024 and release it in theaters before streaming Sugarcane on Disney+.
[70] In May 2021, Abe published a piece in The New Yorker exploring how violent police officers remain in law enforcement.
[72] The book is an expansion on one of the pieces Abe won the Prize for in 2019, “What the Arlee Warriors Were Playing For”, and is the story of coming of age on Montana's Flathead Indian Reservation and a basketball team uniting a community during a suicide epidemic.