North Carolina--Mohr Media is a publishing platform that seeks to promote engagement and understanding of the global world. The goal is to follow good journalistic principles while covering global economics, producing educational videos and publishing books.
Mohr Media supports journalism that advances -- and, noteably, allows -- a vigorous public policy debate.
While many media outlets compete to publish the quickest story, Mohr Media supports a collaborative framework that fosters understanding through collaborative truth-pursuit. Cite sources. Credit others' work. And build a sound foundation of knowledge from which solutions can come.
Our long-term goals are to create visual tools to make complex information accessible to everyone who seeks it and to create a network supporting independent research.
Mohr Media is a publishing-platform run by Patricia Mohr, a writer dedicated to the principles of journalism and the pursuit of knowledge. Patricia worked as a Capitol Hill reporter for Tax Notes Magazine and Education Daily. She was a news producer for the McLaughlin Group. She also contribute freelance reports to the Arabies Trends Magazine, Education Week, and to SHRM. She has a Masters degree in international commerce and policy from George Mason University. Finally, Patricia developed business skills in Durham and Wilmington, North Carolina.
Mohr Media's Global Economic Report is for business leaders operating in a global marketplace, diplomats, policymakers, educators and their students, and individuals engaged in understanding a global world.
Mohr Media was born out of the belief that good story telling and the pursuit of truth are worthwhile activities. The more informed people are about problems, the more apt and able they are to solve them.
Good information builds strong civil society. A well-informed populace holds elected leaders accountable. People are hungry for knowledge, and a digital society affords ample opportunity for people to share information. While that, unfortunately, provides opportunity for people to spread propaganda and misinformation, it creates an incentive to return to the roots of journalism--the pursuit of truth.