Lisa Hagen
Lisa Hagen is a reporter at WABE.
In 2011, Lisa interned and produced videos for the English-language news site Al-Ahram, in Cairo, Egypt. She’s reported for DNAInfo.com and from Clinton Hill/Ft. Greene Brooklyn for the NYTimes’ “The Local” blog. She’s also put in a couple years as a stringer for the New York Post before moving south.
Lisa studied creative writing at Brooklyn’s Pratt Institute, but ended up with a much more practical degree in “Militarism and Sexuality” from New York University’s Gallatin School. A master’s degree from the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism seemed a next logical step.
She’s originally from Kahalu’u, Hawaii. Lisa does not know how to surf. She can, however, filet a salmon very quickly and is a lover of fly-fishing.
-
Gun policy is back on the democratic debate stage in a way it hasn’t been in decades. But are the candidates’ proposals likely to save lives?
-
Lots of research shows the presence of guns increases the risk of violence for women, but self-defense is still the main reason women own firearms.
-
After decades of decline, the rate of Americans killing their intimate partners has seen “a sharp increase” in recent years. Data shows that uptick is exclusively due to gun-related murders.
-
“Constitutional Carry” is a gun law that lets people to carry guns without permits. Laws like this have swept through more than a dozen gun-friendly states in the last decade. But in Georgia, the attempt to pass it is dividing even the most devout gun rights advocates.
-
Hospital-based violence intervention programs have been around for almost 25 years. So why is the approach just catching on in certain parts of the country?
-
Earlier this fall in Atlanta, about a hundred Emory University medical students gathered during lunch, scarfing down their meal before a panel discussion. They came, on their own time, to learn how to talk to their future patients about gun safety.
-
Each year, hundreds of thousands of people turn out for fan conventions around the country. Many of them dress in elaborate costumes as their favorite sci-fi or video game characters. And often, those costumes involve prop guns.