ABSTRACT

Praise for the first edition:

‘A surprising book. I’m surprised that it hasn’t been done before, and I’d also be surprised if anyone did it better.’ Roger Cook, The Cook Report, Central Television

‘A book that no aspiring student of the subject can do without.’Jon Snow, Channel 4 News

Investigative journalism has helped bring down governments, imprison politicians, trigger legislation, reveal miscarriages of justice and shame corporations. Even today, when much of the media colludes with power and when viciousness and sensationalism are staples of formerly high-minded media, investigative journalists can stand up for the powerless, the exploited, the truth.

Investigative Journalism provides an unrivalled introduction to this vital part of our social life: its origins, the men and women who established its norms and its achievements in the last decades. Two chapters describe the relationships with the law, bringing us up to date, and others deal with the professional techniques, the sociology and the teaching of investigative journalism. A further new chapter examines the influence of the blogosphere on investigative journalism.

The case studies of the first edition have been supplemented by new chapters: the investigators and methods which revealed the subcontracting of the torture of Iraqi prisoners; how the murder of Stephen Lawrence was treated in the Daily Mail; the tabloids and their investigations; BBC Panorama.

part |2 pages

PA RT I Context

chapter 1|11 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter |9 pages

Relationship to reporting and analysis

chapter |9 pages

CONTACTS

Contact details of some organisations, sites and publications useful to investigative journalists

chapter 3|16 pages

FORTY YEARS

A tradition of investigative journalism

chapter 4|20 pages

THE BLAIR YEARS

Mediocracy and investigative journalism

chapter |6 pages

Audiences

chapter |9 pages

Publishing

chapter |3 pages

Whistleblowers

chapter |14 pages

Digging

chapter 9|17 pages

UNIVERSITIES AS EVANGELISTS OF THE WATCHDOG ROLE

Teaching investigative journalism to undergraduates

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

part |2 pages

PA RT I I

chapter 11|15 pages

FROM SHADOW BOXING TO GHOST PLANE

English journalism and the War on Terror

chapter |2 pages

Investigations

chapter |7 pages

Discussion

chapter |2 pages

Note

chapter 13|14 pages

INVESTIGATING CORPORATE CORRUPTION

An example from BBC’s File on Four

chapter 14|2 pages

PANORAMA – INVESTIGATIVE TV?

chapter |3 pages

The ‘new’ Panorama

chapter |8 pages

Populist investigations (8)

chapter 15|13 pages

SCRUTINISING SOCIAL POLICY

An example from Channel 4’s Dispatches

chapter |3 pages

Notes

chapter 16|17 pages

JOURNALISM WITH ATTITUDE

The Daily Mail

chapter 17|7 pages

EXPOSING MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE

An example from BBC’s Rough Justice

chapter |4 pages

Example: ‘Death in the Playground’

chapter 18|8 pages

LOCAL POWER AND PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY

An example from the East Midlands

chapter |1 pages

Masons and others

chapter |10 pages

The changing system

chapter 19|21 pages

SUBTERFUGE, SET-UPS, STINGS AND STUNTS

How red-tops go about their investigations

chapter |4 pages

Sources and the problems of sourcing

chapter |12 pages

Example: ‘Making a Killing’

chapter 21|12 pages

GRAVE-DIGGING

The case of ‘the Cossacks’

chapter |1 pages

Bibliography

chapter 22|14 pages

INTERFERING WITH FOREIGNERS

An example from First Tuesday