Elizabeth Becker (journalist)
Elizabeth Becker is an American journalist and author. She has written five books and is best known for her reporting and writing on Cambodia.
Biography
Elizabeth Becker graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in South Asian Studies and studied language at the Kendriya Hindi Sansthan in Agra, India. She was an Edelman fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. Her papers on Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge are held at The University of Washington Southeast Asia Library as the Elizabeth Becker collection.Becker is the mother of two adult children. She is married to William L. Nash and lives in Washington, D.C.
Career
Becker began her career reporting from Cambodia during the Vietnam War for the Washington Post as a local stringer. She joined the newspaper’s staff in Washington. She was the Senior Foreign Editor of National Public Radio where she received two DuPont Columbia awards as executive producer for reporting South Africa's first democratic elections and the Rwandan genocide.Becker is the author of You Don't Belong Here: How Three Women Rewrote the Story of War, which won the 2022 Goldsmith Book Prize from Harvard and the 2022 Sperber Prize from Fordham. Her first book When the War Was Over, a modern history of Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge won a Robert F. Kennedy book citation. That book includes her visit to Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge and interview of Pol Pot. Rithy Panh made the documentary film Bophana based on an excerpt of the book. Her early investigation of the Khmer Rouge was detailed in A Problem from Hell; America in the Age of Genocide by Samantha Power. She is also the author of Overbooked: The Exploding Business of Travel and Tourism and America's Vietnam War: A Narrative History for young adults.
Becker was summoned to testify as an expert witness before the Khmer Rouge genocide tribunal known officially as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.