Indigenous Storytellers Series Continues with Journalist Allison Herrera

By Colleen Thurston

Join the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History and the School of Journalism and Strategic Media in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences this semester for a series of evenings with celebrated Indigenous storytellers.

The series continues at 6 p.m. Thursday, March 5, with journalist Allison Herrera.

Herrera is currently the Climate Editor for Colorado Public Radio. Her heritage is Xolon Salinan; her family’s traditional village was in the Toro Creek area of the Central California coast.

Herrera has covered gender and equity for PRI’s reporting project “Across Women’s Lives,” which focuses on women’s rights around the world. This project has taken her to Ukraine, where Herrera showcased the country’s global surrogacy industry, and reported on families who are so desperate to escape the ongoing civil war that they have moved to abandoned towns near the Chernobyl nuclear disaster site.

Herrera’s Localore project “Invisible Nations” received several awards from the Associated Press and the Society of Professional Journalists.

Herrera previously covered Oklahoma’s diverse Indigenous population and received a News & Documentary Emmy nomination for her Reveal story “Does the Time Fit the Crime,” which centered on criminal justice in Oklahoma and Ohio.

The Pryor Center is located at 1 East Center Street, Suite 120, and parking is available on the Fayetteville Square.