Michener Award

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The Michener Award is one of the highest distinctions in Canadian journalism. The award was founded in 1970 by Roland Michener who was Governor General of Canada at the time but is named after Michener's daughter Wendy, a Toronto journalist and art critic who died unexpectedly in 1969. Since 1970, the Michener Award is presented yearly by the Governor General at Rideau Hall to a Canadian news organization "whose entry is judged to have made a significant impact on public policy or on the lives of Canadians". [1] Although the award is not presented to individual journalists, five individuals of the nominated finalists are invited to the award ceremony so that their contributions can also be acknowledged.

Since 1987, the Michener Foundation also attributes annually the Michener-Deacon Fellowship which provides financial support to a journalist wishing to complete a project that serves the Canadian public interest. The fellowship is named in honor of Roland Michener and late journalist Paul Deacon.

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