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Investigative journalism

Investigative journalism is a form of journalism in which reporters deeply investigate a single topic of interest, such as serious crimes, political corruption, or corporate wrongdoing. An investigative journalist may spend months or years researching and preparing a report. Practitioners sometimes use the terms "watchdog reporting" or "accountability reporting."

Most investigative journalism has traditionally been conducted by newspapers, wire services, and freelance journalists. With the decline in income through advertising, many traditional news services have struggled to fund investigative journalism, due to it being very time-consuming and expensive. Journalistic investigations are increasingly carried out by news organizations working together, even internationally (as in the case of the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers), or by organizations such as ProPublica, which have not operated previously as news publishers and which rely on the support of the public and benefactors to fund their work.

The growth of media conglomerates in the U.S. since the 1980s has been accompanied by massive cuts in the budgets for investigative journalism. A 2002 study concluded "that investigative journalism has all but disappeared from the nation's commercial airwaves".[1]

Definitions

University of Missouri journalism professor Steve Weinberg defined investigative journalism as: "Reporting, through one's own initiative and work product, matters of importance to readers, viewers, or listeners."[2] In many cases, the subjects of the reporting wish the matters under scrutiny to remain undisclosed. There are currently university departments for teaching investigative journalism. Conferences are conducted presenting peer-reviewed research into investigative journalism.[citation needed]

British media theorist Hugo de Burgh (2000) states that: "An investigative journalist is a man or woman whose profession is to discover the truth and to identify lapses from it in whatever media may be available. The act of doing this generally is called investigative journalism and is distinct from apparently similar work done by police, lawyers, auditors, and regulatory bodies in that it is not limited as to target, not legally founded and closely connected to publicity."[3]

History

American journalism textbooks point out that muckraking standards promoted by McClure's Magazine around 1902, "Have become integral to the character of modern investigative journalism."[4] Furthermore, the successes of the early muckrakers continued to inspire journalists.[5][6]

Tools

An investigative reporter may make use of one or more of these tools, among others, on a single story:

  • Analysis of documents, such as lawsuits and other legal documents, tax records, government reports, regulatory reports, and corporate financial filings.
  • Databases of public records.
  • Investigation of technical issues, including scrutiny of government and business practices and their effects.
  • Research into social and legal issues.
  • Subscription research sources such as LexisNexis.
  • Numerous interviews with on-the-record sources as well as, in some instances, interviews with anonymous sources (for example whistleblowers).
  • Federal or state Freedom of Information Acts to obtain documents and data from government agencies.
  • OSINT (Open-Source Intelligence) databases and tools that contain free and open resources that anybody can use.

Examples

  • Julius Chambers of the New-York Tribune had himself committed to the Bloomingdale Asylum in 1872, and his account led to the release of twelve patients who were not mentally ill, a reorganization of the staff and administration, and eventually to a change in the lunacy laws;[7] this later led to the publication of the book A Mad World and Its Inhabitants (1876).
  • Ida B. Wells-Barnett's 1892 Southern Horrors documented lynching in the United States, exposing in the pages of black-owned newspapers as a campaign of oppression and intimidation against African Americans. A white mob destroyed her newspaper press and office in retaliation for her reporting.
  • Ida Tarbell's 1904 book, The History of the Standard Oil Company, exposed the nefarious practices and methods of the monopoly of the company, and led to its dismantling.
  • Nellie Bly, a pseudonym used by Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman in the late 19th century, famously feigned insanity as part of her 1887 undercover investigation into and subsequent exposé regarding the inner-workings of the Women's Lunatic Asylum in New York City. Published to wide acclaim as a series of articles in the New York World which were later compiled and further detailed in her book Ten Days in a Mad-House, Bly's revelations led to both a grand jury investigation of the asylum and increased funding for the Department of Public Charities and Corrections.
  • Between 1972-1974 Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein uncovered and exposed a variety of incriminating information regarding President Richard Nixon's 1968-1972 presidential campaign. The information exposed, prompted Nixon's resignation in 1974 and was then on recognized as the Watergate scandal.
  • Bill Dedman's 1988 investigation, The Color of Money,[8] for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on racial discrimination by mortgage lenders in middle-income neighborhoods, received the 1989 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting and was an influential early example of computer-assisted reporting or database journalism.
  • Brian Deer's British press award-winning investigation for The Sunday Times of London into the worldwide MMR vaccine controversy which revealed that research, published by The Lancet, associating the children's vaccine with autism was fraudulent.[9][10][11]
  • The Daily Telegraph investigated claims that various British Members of Parliament had been filing dubious and frivolous expenses claims, and had done for many years in secret. The House of Commons Authority initially tried to block the release of the information, but the expenses were leaked to the Telegraph. The newspaper then released pieces of information which dominated the news for weeks and caused considerable anger in the UK.
  • John M. Crewdson of the Chicago Tribune wrote a 1996 article[12] proposing the installment of defibrillators on American airliners. Crewdson argued that based on his research and analysis, "Medical kits and defibrillators would be economically justified if they saved just 3 lives each year." Soon after the article's publication, airlines began installing defibrillators on planes, and the devices began to show up in airports and other public spaces. Ten years after installing defibrillators, American Airlines reported that 80 lives had been saved by the machines.[13]
  • One of the largest teams of investigative journalists is the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) launched in 1997 by the Center for Public Integrity[14] which includes 165 investigative reporters in over 65 countries[15] working collaboratively on crime, corruption, and abuse of power at a global level,[15] under Gerard Ryle as Director.[16] Working with major media outlets globally, they have exposed organised crime, international tobacco companies, private military cartels, asbestos companies, climate change lobbyists, details of Iraq and Afghanistan war contracts, and most recently the Panama Papers[15] and Paradise Papers.[17][18][19]
  • Hopewell Chin'ono, the award-winning Zimbabwean journalist who investigated and exposed the Covid-gate scandal in Zimbabwe in June 2020. US$60 million was siphoned to a shadowy company called Drax that is linked to President Emmerson Mnangagwa. The exposure resulted in the dismissal and arrest of Health Minister Obbidiah Moyo. Hopewell Chin'ono was arrested on flimsy charges in an apparent attempt to silence him.[20]
  • The investigative Commons center opened in Berlin, Germany in 2021 and houses the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, Forensic Architecture, and Bellingcat.[21]

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ McChesney, Robert W. (2004). The Problem of the Media: U.S. Communication Politics in the 21st century. Monthly Review Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-58367-105-4., citing Just, Marion; Levine, Rosalind; Regan, Kathleen (November–December 2002), "Investigative Journalism Despite the Odds", Columbia Journalism Review: 103ff
  2. ^ Weinberg, Steve (1996). The Reporter's Handbook: An Investigator's Guide To Documents and Techniques. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-13596-6.
  3. ^ de Burgh, Hugo, ed. (2000). Investigative Journalism: Context and Practice. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-19054-1.
  4. ^ Sloan, W. David; Parcell, Lisa Mullikin (2002). American Journalism: History, Principles, Practices. McFarland. pp. 211–213. ISBN 978-0-7864-1371-3.
  5. ^ Tichi, Cecelia (2013). Exposés and Excess: Muckraking in America, 1900 / 2000. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-0375-2.
  6. ^ Hess, Stephen (2013). Whatever Happened to the Washington Reporters, 1978–2012. Brookings Institution Press. ISBN 978-0-8157-2540-4.
  7. ^ "A New Hospital for the Insane". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. December 1876.
  8. ^ Dedman, Bill (1989). "The Color of Money". Power Reporting.
  9. ^ Godlee, F.; Smith, J.; Marcovitch, H. (5 January 2011). "Wakefield's article linking MMR vaccine and autism was fraudulent". BMJ. 342: c7452. doi:10.1136/bmj.c7452. ISSN 0959-8138. PMID 21209060. S2CID 43640126.
  10. ^ Ziv, Stav (10 February 2015). "Andrew Wakefield, Father of the Anti-Vaccine Movement, Responds to the Current Measles Outbreak for the First Time". Newsweek. New York. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  11. ^ Boseley, Sarah (2 February 2010). "Lancet retracts 'utterly false' MMR paper". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  12. ^ Crewdson, John (30 June 1996). "Cardiac Arrest at 37,000 Feet". Chicago Tribune.
  13. ^ Kovach, Bill; Rosenstiel, Tom (2010). Blur: How to Know What's True in the Age of Information Overload. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 58–60. ISBN 978-1-60819-302-8.
  14. ^ Vasilyeva, Natalya; Anderson, Mae (3 April 2016). "News Group Claims Huge Trove of Data on Offshore Accounts". The New York Times. Associated Press. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  15. ^ a b c "About the ICIJ". The Center for Public Integrity. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  16. ^ "Gerard Ryle". Center for Public Integrity.
  17. ^ Fitzgibbon, Will; et al. (5 November 2017). "The 1 Percent- Offshore Trove Exposes Trump-Russia Links And Piggy Banks of the Wealthiest 1 Percent – A new leak of confidential records reveals the financial hideaways of iconic brands and power brokers across the political spectrum". International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  18. ^ Grandoni, Dino (6 November 2017). "Analysis | The Energy 202: What you need to know about Wilbur Ross and the Paradise Papers". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  19. ^ Disis, Jackie Wattles and Jill (6 November 2017). "Paradise Papers: What you need to know". CNNMoney.
  20. ^ Muchena, Deprose (20 July 2020). "Zimbabwe: Authorities continue their crackdown on dissent with arrest of investigative journalist and activist". Amnesty International. Retrieved 4 January 2021. Zimbabwean authorities must stop misusing the criminal justice system to persecute journalists and activists who are simply exercising their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. The authorities must stop using the police and courts to silence dissent.
  21. ^ Oltermann, Philip (27 June 2021). "Berlin's no 1 digital detective agency is on the trail of human rights abusers". The Guardian. London, United Kingdom. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 28 June 2021.

Further reading

Web

  • "Current State of Investigative Reporting", talk by Seymour Hersh at Boston University, 19 May 2009
  • Video of the 2010 Logan Symposium at University of California Berkeley's "Consequences of Investigative Reporting" panel, in which reporters from the Sahara Reporters, the Medill Innocence Project at Northwestern, The Washington Post, The Las Vegas Review-Journal, and The El Paso Times talk about the dangers investigative reporters face; their experiences range from threat to life and limb for reporting on corruption in Africa, to subpoenas aimed at a journalism professor and his students for attempting to bring to light a miscarriage of justice; a Pulitzer Prize winner describes reporting on national security as her sources face internal inquisitions; a veteran reporter in Las Vegas talks about taking on casino moguls and organized crime; while a reporter covering the Mexican border explains how she has survived the violent reality of the undeclared war on our border, April 2010

Books

  • Typewriter Guerillas: Closeups of 20 Top Investigative Reporters, by J. C. Behrens (paperback) 1977.
  • Raising Hell: Straight Talk with Investigative Journalists, by Ron Chepesiuk, Haney Howell, and Edward Lee (paperback) 1997
  • Investigative Reporting: A Study in Technique (Journalism Media Manual), by David Spark, (paperback) 1999.
  • Tell Me No Lies: Investigative Journalism That Changed the World, John Pilger, ed. (paperback) 2005.
  • Harber, Anton; Renn, Margaret, eds. (2010). Troublemakers: The Best of South Africa's Investigative Journalism. Auckland Park, South Africa: Jacana Media. ISBN 9781770098930. OCLC 794905854.

External links

Listen to this article (3 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 12 March 2010 (2010-03-12), and does not reflect subsequent edits.
  • Global South Development Magazine a magazine of development reporting and investigative journalism
  • Global Investigative Journalism (U.K., created 2003)
  • Investigative Reporters & Editors (IRE, since 1975)
  • Forum for African Investigative Reporters (FAIR) was established in 2003 in South Africa.
  • Nepal Khoj Patrakarita Kendra, or Centre for Investigative Journalism (CIJ, Lalitpur, established 1996)
  • Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ, founded 1989)
  • Centre for Investigative Journalism (London, launched 2003)
  • Bureau of Investigative Journalism (London, launched 2010)
  • Investigative News Network (INN, U.S. created 2009)
  • ProPublica (established 2007)
  • Brazilian Association for Investigative Journalism (ABRAJI, established 2002)
  • Investigative Reporting Workshop (American University, created 2008)
  • Chart – Real and Fake News (2016)/Vanessa Otero () (Mark Frauenfelder)
  • Chart – Real and Fake News (2014) (2016)/Pew Research Center
  • "How to expose corruption, vice and incompetence – by those who have". The Guardian. 14 October 2021. An article by six investigative journalists on the situation of investigative journalism in the UK.

investigative, journalism, other, uses, investigative, journalism, disambiguation, broader, coverage, this, topic, watchdog, journalism, form, journalism, which, reporters, deeply, investigate, single, topic, interest, such, serious, crimes, political, corrupt. For other uses see Investigative Journalism disambiguation For broader coverage of this topic see Watchdog journalism Investigative journalism is a form of journalism in which reporters deeply investigate a single topic of interest such as serious crimes political corruption or corporate wrongdoing An investigative journalist may spend months or years researching and preparing a report Practitioners sometimes use the terms watchdog reporting or accountability reporting Most investigative journalism has traditionally been conducted by newspapers wire services and freelance journalists With the decline in income through advertising many traditional news services have struggled to fund investigative journalism due to it being very time consuming and expensive Journalistic investigations are increasingly carried out by news organizations working together even internationally as in the case of the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers or by organizations such as ProPublica which have not operated previously as news publishers and which rely on the support of the public and benefactors to fund their work The growth of media conglomerates in the U S since the 1980s has been accompanied by massive cuts in the budgets for investigative journalism A 2002 study concluded that investigative journalism has all but disappeared from the nation s commercial airwaves 1 Contents 1 Definitions 2 History 3 Tools 4 Examples 5 Awards 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Web 8 2 Books 9 External linksDefinitions EditUniversity of Missouri journalism professor Steve Weinberg defined investigative journalism as Reporting through one s own initiative and work product matters of importance to readers viewers or listeners 2 In many cases the subjects of the reporting wish the matters under scrutiny to remain undisclosed There are currently university departments for teaching investigative journalism Conferences are conducted presenting peer reviewed research into investigative journalism citation needed British media theorist Hugo de Burgh 2000 states that An investigative journalist is a man or woman whose profession is to discover the truth and to identify lapses from it in whatever media may be available The act of doing this generally is called investigative journalism and is distinct from apparently similar work done by police lawyers auditors and regulatory bodies in that it is not limited as to target not legally founded and closely connected to publicity 3 History EditAmerican journalism textbooks point out that muckraking standards promoted by McClure s Magazine around 1902 Have become integral to the character of modern investigative journalism 4 Furthermore the successes of the early muckrakers continued to inspire journalists 5 6 Tools EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message An investigative reporter may make use of one or more of these tools among others on a single story Analysis of documents such as lawsuits and other legal documents tax records government reports regulatory reports and corporate financial filings Databases of public records Investigation of technical issues including scrutiny of government and business practices and their effects Research into social and legal issues Subscription research sources such as LexisNexis Numerous interviews with on the record sources as well as in some instances interviews with anonymous sources for example whistleblowers Federal or state Freedom of Information Acts to obtain documents and data from government agencies OSINT Open Source Intelligence databases and tools that contain free and open resources that anybody can use Examples EditThis article may contain indiscriminate excessive or irrelevant examples Please improve the article by adding more descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for further suggestions January 2023 Julius Chambers of the New York Tribune had himself committed to the Bloomingdale Asylum in 1872 and his account led to the release of twelve patients who were not mentally ill a reorganization of the staff and administration and eventually to a change in the lunacy laws 7 this later led to the publication of the book A Mad World and Its Inhabitants 1876 Ida B Wells Barnett s 1892 Southern Horrors documented lynching in the United States exposing in the pages of black owned newspapers as a campaign of oppression and intimidation against African Americans A white mob destroyed her newspaper press and office in retaliation for her reporting Ida Tarbell s 1904 book The History of the Standard Oil Company exposed the nefarious practices and methods of the monopoly of the company and led to its dismantling Nellie Bly a pseudonym used by Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman in the late 19th century famously feigned insanity as part of her 1887 undercover investigation into and subsequent expose regarding the inner workings of the Women s Lunatic Asylum in New York City Published to wide acclaim as a series of articles in the New York World which were later compiled and further detailed in her book Ten Days in a Mad House Bly s revelations led to both a grand jury investigation of the asylum and increased funding for the Department of Public Charities and Corrections Between 1972 1974 Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein uncovered and exposed a variety of incriminating information regarding President Richard Nixon s 1968 1972 presidential campaign The information exposed prompted Nixon s resignation in 1974 and was then on recognized as the Watergate scandal Bill Dedman s 1988 investigation The Color of Money 8 for The Atlanta Journal Constitution on racial discrimination by mortgage lenders in middle income neighborhoods received the 1989 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting and was an influential early example of computer assisted reporting or database journalism Brian Deer s British press award winning investigation for The Sunday Times of London into the worldwide MMR vaccine controversy which revealed that research published by The Lancet associating the children s vaccine with autism was fraudulent 9 10 11 The Daily Telegraph investigated claims that various British Members of Parliament had been filing dubious and frivolous expenses claims and had done for many years in secret The House of Commons Authority initially tried to block the release of the information but the expenses were leaked to the Telegraph The newspaper then released pieces of information which dominated the news for weeks and caused considerable anger in the UK John M Crewdson of the Chicago Tribune wrote a 1996 article 12 proposing the installment of defibrillators on American airliners Crewdson argued that based on his research and analysis Medical kits and defibrillators would be economically justified if they saved just 3 lives each year Soon after the article s publication airlines began installing defibrillators on planes and the devices began to show up in airports and other public spaces Ten years after installing defibrillators American Airlines reported that 80 lives had been saved by the machines 13 One of the largest teams of investigative journalists is the Washington based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists ICIJ launched in 1997 by the Center for Public Integrity 14 which includes 165 investigative reporters in over 65 countries 15 working collaboratively on crime corruption and abuse of power at a global level 15 under Gerard Ryle as Director 16 Working with major media outlets globally they have exposed organised crime international tobacco companies private military cartels asbestos companies climate change lobbyists details of Iraq and Afghanistan war contracts and most recently the Panama Papers 15 and Paradise Papers 17 18 19 Hopewell Chin ono the award winning Zimbabwean journalist who investigated and exposed the Covid gate scandal in Zimbabwe in June 2020 US 60 million was siphoned to a shadowy company called Drax that is linked to President Emmerson Mnangagwa The exposure resulted in the dismissal and arrest of Health Minister Obbidiah Moyo Hopewell Chin ono was arrested on flimsy charges in an apparent attempt to silence him 20 The investigative Commons center opened in Berlin Germany in 2021 and houses the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights Forensic Architecture and Bellingcat 21 Awards EditGeorge Polk Awards Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting Investigative Reporters and Editors Award Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting Worth Bingham Prize for investigative reportingSee also EditGlossary of journalism List of American journalism awards Investigative journalism Preventive journalism Rodolfo Walsh The Hidden is More ImmenseReferences Edit McChesney Robert W 2004 The Problem of the Media U S Communication Politics in the 21st century Monthly Review Press p 81 ISBN 978 1 58367 105 4 citing Just Marion Levine Rosalind Regan Kathleen November December 2002 Investigative Journalism Despite the Odds Columbia Journalism Review 103ff Weinberg Steve 1996 The Reporter s Handbook An Investigator s Guide To Documents and Techniques St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 13596 6 de Burgh Hugo ed 2000 Investigative Journalism Context and Practice London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 19054 1 Sloan W David Parcell Lisa Mullikin 2002 American Journalism History Principles Practices McFarland pp 211 213 ISBN 978 0 7864 1371 3 Tichi Cecelia 2013 Exposes and Excess Muckraking in America 1900 2000 University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 0375 2 Hess Stephen 2013 Whatever Happened to the Washington Reporters 1978 2012 Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 2540 4 A New Hospital for the Insane Brooklyn Daily Eagle December 1876 Dedman Bill 1989 The Color of Money Power Reporting Godlee F Smith J Marcovitch H 5 January 2011 Wakefield s article linking MMR vaccine and autism was fraudulent BMJ 342 c7452 doi 10 1136 bmj c7452 ISSN 0959 8138 PMID 21209060 S2CID 43640126 Ziv Stav 10 February 2015 Andrew Wakefield Father of the Anti Vaccine Movement Responds to the Current Measles Outbreak for the First Time Newsweek New York Retrieved 19 February 2015 Boseley Sarah 2 February 2010 Lancet retracts utterly false MMR paper The Guardian London Retrieved 14 January 2015 Crewdson John 30 June 1996 Cardiac Arrest at 37 000 Feet Chicago Tribune Kovach Bill Rosenstiel Tom 2010 Blur How to Know What s True in the Age of Information Overload New York Bloomsbury Publishing pp 58 60 ISBN 978 1 60819 302 8 Vasilyeva Natalya Anderson Mae 3 April 2016 News Group Claims Huge Trove of Data on Offshore Accounts The New York Times Associated Press Retrieved 4 April 2016 a b c About the ICIJ The Center for Public Integrity Retrieved 10 February 2015 Gerard Ryle Center for Public Integrity Fitzgibbon Will et al 5 November 2017 The 1 Percent Offshore Trove Exposes Trump Russia Links And Piggy Banks of the Wealthiest 1 Percent A new leak of confidential records reveals the financial hideaways of iconic brands and power brokers across the political spectrum International Consortium of Investigative Journalists Retrieved 6 November 2017 Grandoni Dino 6 November 2017 Analysis The Energy 202 What you need to know about Wilbur Ross and the Paradise Papers The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 6 November 2017 Disis Jackie Wattles and Jill 6 November 2017 Paradise Papers What you need to know CNNMoney Muchena Deprose 20 July 2020 Zimbabwe Authorities continue their crackdown on dissent with arrest of investigative journalist and activist Amnesty International Retrieved 4 January 2021 Zimbabwean authorities must stop misusing the criminal justice system to persecute journalists and activists who are simply exercising their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly The authorities must stop using the police and courts to silence dissent Oltermann Philip 27 June 2021 Berlin s no 1 digital detective agency is on the trail of human rights abusers The Guardian London United Kingdom ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 28 June 2021 Further reading EditWeb Edit Current State of Investigative Reporting talk by Seymour Hersh at Boston University 19 May 2009 Video of the 2010 Logan Symposium at University of California Berkeley s Consequences of Investigative Reporting panel in which reporters from the Sahara Reporters the Medill Innocence Project at Northwestern The Washington Post The Las Vegas Review Journal and The El Paso Times talk about the dangers investigative reporters face their experiences range from threat to life and limb for reporting on corruption in Africa to subpoenas aimed at a journalism professor and his students for attempting to bring to light a miscarriage of justice a Pulitzer Prize winner describes reporting on national security as her sources face internal inquisitions a veteran reporter in Las Vegas talks about taking on casino moguls and organized crime while a reporter covering the Mexican border explains how she has survived the violent reality of the undeclared war on our border April 2010Books Edit Typewriter Guerillas Closeups of 20 Top Investigative Reporters by J C Behrens paperback 1977 Raising Hell Straight Talk with Investigative Journalists by Ron Chepesiuk Haney Howell and Edward Lee paperback 1997 Investigative Reporting A Study in Technique Journalism Media Manual by David Spark paperback 1999 Tell Me No Lies Investigative Journalism That Changed the World John Pilger ed paperback 2005 Harber Anton Renn Margaret eds 2010 Troublemakers The Best of South Africa s Investigative Journalism Auckland Park South Africa Jacana Media ISBN 9781770098930 OCLC 794905854 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Investigative journalism Wikiversity has learning resources about Video journalism Wikimedia Commons has media related to Investigative journalism Listen to this article 3 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 12 March 2010 2010 03 12 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Global South Development Magazine a magazine of development reporting and investigative journalism Global Investigative Journalism U K created 2003 International Consortium of Investigative Journalists U S founded 1997 Investigative Reporters amp Editors IRE since 1975 Forum for African Investigative Reporters FAIR was established in 2003 in South Africa Nepal Khoj Patrakarita Kendra or Centre for Investigative Journalism CIJ Lalitpur established 1996 Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism PCIJ founded 1989 Centre for Investigative Journalism London launched 2003 Bureau of Investigative Journalism London launched 2010 Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism Jordan Center for Investigative Reporting CIR U S since 1977 Center for Public Integrity s iWatch U S since 1989 Investigative News Network INN U S created 2009 ProPublica established 2007 Brazilian Association for Investigative Journalism ABRAJI established 2002 Investigative Reporting Workshop American University created 2008 Chart Real and Fake News 2016 Vanessa Otero basis Mark Frauenfelder Chart Real and Fake News 2014 2016 Pew Research Center How to expose corruption vice and incompetence by those who have The Guardian 14 October 2021 An article by six investigative journalists on the situation of investigative journalism in the UK Portal Journalism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Investigative journalism amp oldid 1132584710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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