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American journalist
Joseph B. White is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist known for his work for The Wall Street Journal.
White was born in New York City. He attended Harvard University and graduated with a B.A. in English.[1]
White started his career at the Vineyard Gazette in Edgartown, Massachusetts.[1]
In 1982, White moved to the St. Petersburg Times.[1]
White joined the Hartford bureau of the Connecticut Law Tribune in 1986.[1]
In 1987, White joined the Detroit bureau of The Wall Street Journal, and became the bureau chief in 1990.[1][2] White and Detroit bureau chief Paul Ingrassia earned the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting "for often exclusive coverage of General Motors' management turmoil."[1] [3] Their reporting also earned a 1993 Gerald Loeb Award for "Deadline and/or Beat Writing",[4][5][2] and they turned it into a book, "Comeback: The Fall and Rise of the American Automobile Industry," in 1994.[1]
White moved to Brussels in 1994 to become the news editor and chief of correspondents for The Wall Street Journal Europe.[1] He returned the Detroit bureau in 1996 as a news editor covering Columbia-HCA Healthcare and auto industry management issues, and again became the bureau chief in 1998.[1] He worked in the Washington, D.C. bureau from 2008 to 2011 covering business regulation and energy policy, and then returned to Detroit to become the Global Auto Editor.[1]
Gerald Loeb Awards for Deadline and Beat ReportingGerald Loeb Award for Deadline and/or Beat Writing (1985–2000)
1985-1989Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline or Beat Writing (2002)
2002Gerald Loeb Award for Deadline Writing (2003–2007)
2003–2007Gerald Loeb Award for Beat Writing (2001, 2003–2010)
2001;Gerald Loeb Award for Beat Reporting (2011–2023)
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