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Kirsty Lang (born 1962) is a British journalist and broadcaster who works for BBC Radio and Television. Earlier in her career, was on the staff of ''The Sunday Times'' and ''Channel 4 News'', working as a presenter and reporter. Lang was a visiting professor at Columbia University in New York for several months at the beginning of 2012. ==Career== Lang was raised in various parts of the world; her family were evacuated from Nigeria at the time of the Biafran war in 1967. Lang was educated at private schools including Nishimachi International School in Tokyo, Lauriston Girls' School in Melbourne, Dartington Hall School in Devon, England and the International School of Geneva. She first joined the BBC as a graduate trainee in 1986, having gained an MA in Journalism from City University, London〔(Kirsty Lang interview ) TV Newsroom, c2005; Retrieved 10 February 2009〕 following a degree in International Relations and an MSc in Government and Politics from the London School of Economics. In 1989 she became a Central European correspondent for the World Service and later a reporter on the BBC's ''Newsnight''. After a spell as Paris correspondent for ''The Sunday Times'', she became a co-presenter/reporter for ''Channel 4 News'' (1998-2002). She returned to the BBC when the digital channel BBC Four was established in 2002 and has presented ''The World'', an evening news programme and the replacement ''World News Today''. Lang is a regular presenter of a nightly arts and culture programme Radio Four's'' Front Row'' and has also been a stand-in anchor for ''The World Tonight'' and other programmes. She used to appear on the ''Today'' programme and ''The World at One''.〔("Kirsty Lang" ), BBC Radio〕 From January to April 2012, Lang was a visiting professor at Columbia University, New York City in the School of International and Public Affairs. From 19 November to 23 November 2012, she was one of the two co-presenters of "On the French Fringe", a programme broadcast on BBC Radio Four at 1:45 p.m. about life in France, looking at how activities in France such as films or cartoons had caught the national psyche in that country. Lang also contributes, on occasion, to publications including ''The Times'', ''The Guardian'' and the ''Radio Times'', and was chair of the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2008. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kirsty Lang」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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