Forbidden Stories Amazon Murder

Investigating Organized Crime in the Amazon: The Bruno and Dom Project

After the British journalist Dom Phillips and the Brazilian Indigenous affairs expert Bruno Pereira were killed, several newsrooms and more than 50 journalists collaborated on Forbidden Stories’ The Bruno and Dom Project, to honor the pair’s legacy and expose illegal activities in the area along the borders of Brazil, Peru, and Colombia, where the men were murdered.

Forbidden Stories Amazon Murder

Investigando o Crime Organizado na Amazônia: o Projeto Bruno e Dom

Depois que o jornalista britânico Dom Phillips e o indigenista brasileiro Bruno Pereira foram mortos, várias redações e mais de 50 jornalistas colaboraram no Projeto Bruno e Dom, do Forbidden Stories, para honrar o legado da dupla e expor as atividades ilegais na área ao longo das fronteiras do Brasil, Peru e Colômbia, onde os homens foram assassinados.

Por qué cubrir el medio ambiente significa arriesgar la vida

Investigar el medio ambiente en los países en desarrollo puede ser un juego particularmente peligroso, mucho más en el Sur Global que en América del Norte y Europa. Los periodistas del mundo en desarrollo son el blanco principal de poderosos intereses políticos y económicos, operan en un clima hostil y, a menudo, pierden la vida lejos de la atención de los medios occidentales.

Forbidden Stories' Pegasus Project exposé

Data Journalism Top 10: Pegasus, Silencing Reporters, Europe Flooding, Diversity Mapping, K-pop

Our NodeXL mapping from July 12 to 18, which tracks the most popular data journalism stories on Twitter each week, found a series of articles resulting from the collaborative project that analyzed an unprecedented leak of more than 50,000 phone numbers selected for surveillance. In this edition, we also feature an insight into Facebook’s data wars by The New York Times, an interactive piece by Al Jazeera on how the holy city of Mecca has expanded, and a colorful project by the Washington Post on the rise of K-pop.

What We’re Reading: Tracking the Global Arms Trade, PPE Procurement Watch, and International Support for Whistleblowers

For this week’s Friday 5, where GIJN rounds up journalism news in English from around the world, we’re reading about the new Corruption Tracker for the international arms trade, dodgy deals in personal protective equipment procurement, and a recently launched organization to support whistleblowers legally, as well as financially. 

GIJN Welcomes Seven New Member Organizations in Five Countries

The Global Investigative Journalism Network is delighted to welcome seven new member organizations based in five countries. We are particularly pleased to welcome our first member in Australia and our first representing Syrian journalists. The new groups bring GIJN’s global membership to 184 organizations in 77 countries.