Arwa Gunja

Senior Producer

The Takeaway

Arwa is Senior Producer of the The Takeaway.

Arwa Gunja is Senior Producer of The Takeaway. At The Takeaway, she helped to produce a three-part series on voters in Lake County, Ohio during the 2012 presidential campaign season and produced and edited a digital media project commemorating the 10-year anniversary of 9/11.  Arwa also oversees editorial content during breaking news events, including Hurricane Sandy, the shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, and the fall of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. Arwa joined The Takeaway in December 2009. Before that, she was a producer at NPR, where she worked on several programs, including Morning Edition and Tell Me More. She also worked with the network's Election Unit to cover the 2008 presidential election, including election night coverage and President Barack Obama's inauguration. In spring 2012, Arwa was selected as a fellow with the International Center for Journalists, based in Washington, D.C. Through the fellowship, she traveled to France to report on the impacts of the country's "burqa ban" legislation one year later. Arwa graduated from New York University in 2007 with a degree in journalism. 


Forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad sit on a tank as a convoy of buses and other vehicles try to evacuate

As Aleppo evacuates the battle for Syria has become a source of sad musical inspiration

Music

This Syrian musician has turned the struggle for Aleppo and other battles in Syria into very sad songs.

Teens

What we’re learning about the teenage brain

Science
Metropolitan Police at 2011's March for the Alternative.

How British police officers keep the peace, without carrying guns

Justice
After being accepted to all eight Ivy League schools, Victor Agbafe plans to attend Harvard University in the fall.

He got accepted into all 8 Ivy League schools and Stanford. And decided.

Education
Gen. Ann Dunwoody, then commanding general of US Army Material Command, speaks as singer Alicia Keys looks on during a roundtable discussion with students at Dunbar High School in Washington, DC, on March 19, 2009.

America’s first female four-star general reflects on the challenges of serving

Culture
A row of abandoned houses in Baltimore, Maryland. Much of the city's housing stock is old and in disrepair, hurting the city's ability to retain its citizens.

How housing and discrimination have long fueled Baltimore’s anger

Development

Baltimore’s population has long been segregated by race and class, even as a matter of formal government policy. And while those discriminatory practices are no longer law, they’ve created a legacy of poor housing that still harms poor, overwhelmingly black residents.

Amazon's drone delivery program, known as Amazon Prime Air, will be doing its testing in Canada because of tight FAA airspace rules.

Blocked in the US, Amazon drones go north of the border

Technology

The true north strong and free (delivery)? Thanks to tight airspace restrictions in the US, Amazon has taken its research into super-speedy drone delivery across the border to a secret facility in Canada.

The cast of the sitcom "Friends," which is one of the Western shows being smuggled to North Koreans by human rights activists and defectors.

Seeking to overthrow North Korea, one American sitcom at a time

Media

It turns out you don’t need your own propaganda department to counter North Korea’s indoctrination of its citizens and maybe start a revolution — just sitcoms like “Friends” and the will to make the dangerous attempt to smuggle it into the North, where citizens lap up Western media.

A Polish Air Force MIG-29 fighter and Italian Air Force Eurofighter Typhoon fighters participate during a NATO air policing mission patrol over the Baltics on February 10, 2015.

The West was stunned by Putin’s military moves. Here’s why NATO says it won’t happen again

Conflict

When Russia moved into Crimea last year, even NATO admits it was caught off-guard. But now a top NATO general says the West is alert to Putin’s plans, and is developing its own moves to stop him from expanding any further.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio walks with Dr. Craig Spencer, at right, as he is discharged from Bellevue Hospital after being declared free of the Ebola virus on November 11, 2014.

After surviving Ebola, Craig Spencer still feels ‘violated’ by America’s needless panic

Medicine

Craig Spencer set off a panic in New York City when he was diagnosed with Ebola last October, accused of reckless behavior by politicians and the media. Now recovered Spencer speaks out against the hysteria that followed his diagnosis in an exclusive interview with WNYC.