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Drawing Conclusions
Fast Company
|October - November 2020
Data journalist Mona Chalabi delivers messages to the masses.

Data tells a story, and when it’s in the hands of Mona Chalabi, data editor for The Guardian U.S., the tale can be riveting. The London- born, New York–based journalist of Iraqi descent has made a career of creating striking visualizations that highlight unexpected issues ranging from female hair-removal to anti-Semitism in Europe, which have been shared as many as 2.2 million times on her personal Instagram account. Recently, she has garnered attention for depicting statistics related to the novel coronavirus and police brutality targeting Black people in the United States. Here, Chalabi— who has also hosted and produced Strange Bird, a Guardian podcast on how numbers shape our lives—talks about bias in data collecting, how she developed her signature style, and why she makes graphics for her least-informed reader first.
TRUST YOURSELF
While studying for a master’s degree from the Paris Institute of Political Studies, Chalabi took a position with the International Organization for Migration, where she compiled information on topics such as the number of Iraqis displaced within the country and those who’d become refugees. Though she enjoyed the work, she didn’t feel that it had much of an impact. “We’d work for months, and [our reports] would be read by 10 people. That was frustrating,” she says. After a one-day workshop on data journalism presented by an editor at
This story is from the October - November 2020 edition of Fast Company.
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