Young leaders look at IFAJ 2010 Congress

The IFAJ-Alltech Young Leaders award winners give their unique perspectives on the IFAJ 2011 Congress in Belgium. To read or listen to their reports, click here...


Annual congress IFAJ 2011

It’s Canada’s turn next!

By Lilian Schaer, IFAJ 2011 Co-Chair

The IFAJ torch – or should I say flag – has officially been passed to Canada as we formally assumed the role of host nation at the farewell banquet of this year’s congress in Belgium.

The International Federation of Agriculture Journalists (IFAJ) hosts its annual conference, called a congress, in a different member country every year. In 2011, Canada will be welcoming farm writers and agricultural communicators to our country for the first time in over forty years. More...

Brochure about the IFAJ

Events

2007 Star Prize Winner for Agricultural Journalism

Marleen van Sleuwen was awarded the 2007 IFAJ Star Prize for Agricultural Journalism, sponsored by John Deere.

The winner was announced and honoured at the 51st congress of the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists (IFAJ), held in Japan last week (September 17 to 23).

The young Dutch journalist focussed on the ethical dilemmas facing farmers when managing unhealthy piglets in her prize-winning article, "Patch up or eliminate? Killing weak pigs can reduce infection sources", published in Boerderij in May 2006 (read article).

"Animal welfare is very high up on the agenda. Even if it is not economical, many farmers do everything they can to get their piglets healthy when they are sick," she said. "Advisors say that it could be more economically correct to kill the weak piglets, but that creates an ethical dilemma."

Van Sleuwen wrote her article after only five months as a working journalist. One of more than 200 delegates attending the IFAJ Congress, she was both very surprised and happy when the announcement was made.

"I did not expect it, not at all but I am very happy of course," she said. "It is a great feeling!"

Runner-up in the competition was Crystal Albers from the Angus Beef Bulletin in the USA, for her article, "Don't let your cattle get lost in translation".

Judges for the award were Aad Vernooij from the Netherlands, Hugh Maynard from Canada and Niels Jørgensen from Denmark.