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Sasha Schell

Open Source Investigative Reporter, UC Berkeley Investigative Reporting Program
Berkeley, CA US
Open To Mentoring
Open To Virtual Coffee
Documentary filmmaker. Open-source investigative reporter. Associate Producer with PBS FRONTLINE on projects in Syria and Afghanistan. Now pursuing open source investigations of violence and environmental damage. Global food supply chains.

About

Sasha Schell is an open-source investigative reporter and documentary filmmaker from Berkeley, California. He covers the environmental impacts of the intensifying great power competition between the US and China. In particular, the increase in militarization and influence seeking operations of both nations in the Asia Pacific region. His methodology uses network-analysis software such as Maltego as well as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to map and trace relevant actors who tend to be hidden in plain sight. In the past year, Sasha has worked closely with the Investigative Reporting Program and the Human Rights Center at UC Berkeley to document the unseen price embedded in global food supply chains. His most recent work is centered on land conflict surrounding agriculture in the Brazilian Amazon. He is currently studying for a Masters degree at UC Berkeleys Graduate School of Journalism. Prior to his open-source environmental work, Sasha worked for three years as an assistant producer for PBS FRONTLINE documentary series investigating conflicts in Syria and Afghanistan with Rain Media. He speaks fluent Mandarin and French.

Featured Work

The Jihadist

Over most of two decades, Abu Mohammad al-Jolani’s life has been a roadmap of Islamist militancy in Iraq and Syria. Designated a terrorist by the United States, the powerful Syrian militant now seeks a new relationship with the West. In his first interview with a Western journalist, the former Al Qaeda commander tells FRONTLINE correspondent Martin Smith his fight is with Syrian President Assad, not the U.S.

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