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Global Investigative Journalism Network -

Global Investigative Journalism Network (https://archive.gijn.org/page/3/)

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Reporters’ Guide to Investigating War Crimes: Introduction

By Anne Koch | Photography by Ron Haviv | September 12, 2023

In the introduction to GIJN’s War Crimes Reporting Guide, GIJN Program Director Anne Koch discusses international law relating to conflict and the role of investigative reporting in uncovering war crimes.

Related: Reporter’s Guide to Investigating War Crimes: Tracing War Criminals

News & Analysis

Behind Closed Doors: Investigating the System for Settling Investor-State Disputes

By Claire Provost | August 29, 2023

The little-known but powerful Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) system considers high stakes cases between companies and national governments, which often take years to resolve and impose extensive legal and other fees. Here, investigative reporter Claire Provost argues that we need more reporting to expose the impact this system has on our democracies.

News & Analysis

Podcasting Goes Visual: How Video Can Help Investigative Storytelling Reach New Audiences

By Laura Dixon | August 28, 2023

Podcasts are quintessentially an audio medium, but to reach newer and younger audiences, many shows are now beginning to add video elements to the traditional format.

Top 10 in Data Journalism
data journalism global water stress Washington Post

Data Journalism Top 10: Global Water Stress, Fentanyl Proliferation, Maui Fires’ Destruction, and Penalty Kicks Strategy

By Alexa van Sickle and Eunice Au | August 24, 2023

In this week’s Top 10 in Data Journalism, GIJN features stories on global water stress, the boom in fentanyl trafficking at the US-Mexico border, the devastating fires in Maui, and the best strategies for successful penalty kicks.

Tools & Techniques

How to Quickly Get to the Important Truth Inside Any Privacy Policy

By Jon Keegan and Jesse Woo, The Markup | August 23, 2023

An investigative data journalist and a former tech lawyer teach you how to spot tricks and hidden disclosures within these interminable documents — and even how to claw back some privacy.

How They Did It
expose child sex trafficking online

Lessons Learned from Exposing Child Sex Trafficking Online

By Majdoleen Hasan | August 22, 2023

A reporting team provides the backstory of the Guardian’s years-long investigation into the world of online child sex trafficking.

10 Questions

Straddling Two Worlds as an Investigative Journalist: ARIJ’s Hoda Osman

By Nader Durgham | August 21, 2023

Since the Arab Spring more than a decade ago, political transformations and increased repression in the Arab world have made investigative journalism all the more crucial — and difficult — in the region. Hoda Osman, executive editor at Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism (ARIJ), discusses how she still covers the region while based in the US.

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Around the World

FIJ Calls for Investigative Journalism Grant Proposals

The US-based Fund for Investigative Journalism is now accepting grant proposals for groundbreaking stories that uncover wrongdoing in the public or private sector. Grants of up to US$10,000 are available and paid directly to freelancers or media outlets to cover expenses related to reporting, including travel, record and document fees, and paying for journalists' time. The final product can be in print, online, video, radio, book, podcast, or documentary format, but all pieces must be published in English by a US-based media site. (International stories are eligible as long as they have a strong US angle and come from a US-based reporter.) Applications must include a brief summary as well as a more detailed pitch of up to 1,000 words that explains the planned budget for the grant. Candidates must also have a letter of commitment from a media outlet to publish the proposed story to be considered for a grant. Deadline to apply is Tuesday, Sept. 5.

Source: Fund for Investigative Journalism

Ankara Court Blocks Access to VOA Turkish

Access to the Voice of America (VOA) Turkish website has been blocked following a court order. On August 21, Turkey's media regulator, the Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTUK), posted a warning on its website, giving VOA Turkish 72 hours to apply for an on on-demand broadcast license or risk having a court block access to its content, citing a 2019 law that authorizes RTUK to request licenses from "media service providers" for them to continue their online presence. On Monday, in response to a request from RTUK, Ankara's 9th Criminal Court of Peace issued the ban without holding a hearing. VOA spokesperson Bridget Serchak said the broadcaster has no plans to obtain a license as it “cannot comply with any directive intended to enable censorship.” Last year, RTUK banned access to VOA Turkish's previous domain name, amerikaninsesi.com, for refusing to comply with the regulator's license requirement because of censorship concerns. Press freedom groups have called on RTUK to stop issuing fines to opposition and critical press and making foreign news inaccessible in order to control the dissemination of information.

Source: VOA

Prosecutor Moves to Shutter Kyrgyzstan’s Kloop Media

The prosecutor’s office in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan's capital, has filed a lawsuit in city courts to liquidate Kloop Media, an independent news outlet and GIJN member known for its reporting on corruption. According to the prosecutor’s document, the reason for the suit is “the implementation of activities that go beyond the scope provided for by the charter.” However, the document focuses mostly on the "negative impact" of tone of Kloop's publications, such as “sharply criticizing the policies of the current government.” Kloop was founded in 2007, and gained prominence in 2010 when it covered Kyrgyzstan’s revolution. It won numerous local awards for its 2017 Samaragate series of investigations, which focused on violations during Kyrgyzstan’s presidential elections that same year. The prosecutor’s move underscores increased pressure on Kyrgyz media. 

Source: Kloop

EU Digital Services Act Goes Into Effect

The EU Digital Services Act has now gone into effect, placing strict new transparency and accountability rules upon major online platforms like Google, Meta, TikTok, and Twitter/X. As of August 25, more than 40 of the largest web platforms must now more carefully safeguard what is seen by users in Europe across a broad range of categories, while honoring fundamental rights like freedom of expression and data protection. According to the new regulations, these tech giants are now more directly responsible for content on their sites — and potentially subject to large fines for violations — and must crack down on breaches of the law related to disinformation, political propaganda, election interference, hate crimes, and child abuse and trafficking.

Source: The Guardian

Record Number of SLAPP Cases in Europe

The number of nuisance lawsuits filed in Europe last year increased to at least 161, breaking the previous record of 146 set in 2020, according to figures published by The Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation and the Coalition Against SLAPPs in Europe (CASE). Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs) are “vexatious” lawsuits filed to shut down acts of public participation, including public interest journalism. They can be brought against media companies, journalists, and anyone who works to hold the powerful to account. Individual journalists were most often the targets of SLAPP cases, followed by media outlets, editors, activists, and NGOs, according to the report. Researchers looked at data from 30 European jurisdictions, but warn that “in some countries, the number of lawsuits mapped by CASE only scrapes the surface when compared to the actual number of cases filed.”

Source: The Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation / CASE

Digital Rights Reporting Training for Balkan Journos

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) is inviting journalists from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Kosovo to apply for a three-day training session on digital rights reporting to be held in Sarajevo on September 26-28. The specialized course will enable journalists from the region to understand digital rights comprehensively, with a focus on reporting breaches, content blocking, manipulation, and digital propaganda as well as open-source investigations, data journalism, fact-checking, and more. Successful applicants will also be eligible for a small grant to produce a digital rights story. Applications close September 5.  

Source: BIRN

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The Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN) is composed of nonprofit investigative journalism organizations that produce stories, conduct training, provide resources, and encourage the creation of similar nonprofit groups. Learn More »


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