Johannes Böhme

Johannes Böhme was selected for the 2023 Shortlist with The traveling tribunal.

Johannes Böhme is an editor at Zeit Online. He has previously worked several years as a freelancer for different German and international media. Last year he received the Theodor-Wolff-Preis for an article about German veterans of the war in Afghanistan. In 2019, he published a novel with Ullstein, on the life of his grandmother. He holds an MPhil in Political Thought and Intellectual History from the University of Cambridge.

Luca Pintér

Luca Pintér was selected for the 2023 Shortlist with All she wanted was a photo of the new-born babies and asked that István and Tamás love the twins.

Luca Pintér graduated from the Department of Sociology at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest in 2011. She started her career as a journalist in her last year of university as an intern at the biggest tabloid in the country (Blikk), and later worked as an editor-reporter for several TV stations (Hír Tv, RTL Magyarország). Since 2018 she has been working for online media (Index.huTelex.hu). Other than covering crime stories, she is mostly interested in general interest stories relevant to a broad range of the population. She particularly enjoys working on the ground, on larger-scale stories, and speaking to people who rarely give interviews. She was the first journalist in Hungary to do a live stream on Facebook of a brain surgery from the operating theatre of the Neurosurgery Clinic in Pécs, which contributed to raising awareness of a new treatment for Parkinson’s disease. She also produced a piece on how births are conducted in Hungarian prisons and the fate of babies born there. Most recently, for an entire year, she and her photojournalist colleague followed the life of a rainbow family who were among the last such family in Hungary to be able to adopt, (and they adopted twins) due to a drastic change in the law. This piece was awarded a special prize by the jury of the Hungarian Press Development Journalism Award in 2023.