Joe Kahn | |
---|---|
Born |
Boston,
Massachusetts, U.S. | August 19, 1964
Education | Harvard University ( BA, MA) |
Relatives | Leo Kahn (father) |
Joseph F. Kahn (born August 19, 1964) is an American journalist who currently serves as executive editor of The New York Times. [1]
Kahn graduated from Harvard University in 1987, where he earned a bachelor's degree in American history and served as president of The Harvard Crimson. [2] In 1990, he received a master's degree in East Asian studies from the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. [1]
Kahn joined the Times in January 1998, after four years as China correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. Before the Journal, he was a reporter at The Dallas Morning News, where he was part of a team of reporters awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for international reporting for their stories on violence against women around the world. [1] In June 1989, the Chinese government ordered Kahn to leave the country because he was working as a reporter while using a tourist visa. [3]
In 2006, Kahn and Jim Yardley won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting [4] for the Times covering rule of law in China.
Kahn was assistant masthead editor for International at the New York Times from 2014 to September 2016. [5] In 2016, Dean Baquet appointed him as managing editor for the Times, where in time he was recognized as Baquet's likely successor as executive editor. [6]
Kahn is of Lithuanian Jewish descent and the eldest child of Dorothy Davidson and Leo Kahn (1916–2011), [7] [8] founder of the Purity Supreme supermarket chain in New England and co-founder of the global office supply chain Staples. [9] Leo had been awarded a journalism degree from Columbia University, after which he briefly had worked as a reporter, prompting a continuing interest in journalism that was reflected in his frequent dissection of newspaper coverage with his son. [1]