Bureau of Investigative Journalism

Yesterday saw the launch of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, Britain’s counterpart to the philanthropically-funded outfits in the US which are attempting to supply the difficult, expensive long-form reporting which is in increasingly short supply in mainstream newspapers and broadcasting. (Disclosure: I’m a Bureau trustee).

The Pulitzer Prize awarded to the American investigative team ProPublica this month was a watershed in revealing to the world at large that cutting-edge journalism has moved outside the places where you’re accustomed to find it.

The Bureau has been made possible by a generous donation from David and Elaine Potter, but will stand or fall by its stories. Last night’s launch at City University London, where the Bureau is based, was a “soft launch” to mark the fact that the Bureau has begun work. Coverage here and here.  The real launch of course will be the publication or broadcast of its first stories.

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1 comment

  1. Susan Greenberg

    Not all investigative journalism is long-form narrative storytelling, and not all narrative nonfiction is investigative. But there often is an overlap of interests for those writers who want the time and space to explore subjects and forms that get lost in the rush of everyday journalism. The tag of “literary journalism” can be claimed with pride for work that is about discovery, and stands the test of time.

    If anyone is interested, an international conference on literary journalism is coming to London in two weeks’ time: May 20 to 22 at Roehampton University:
    http://www.ialjs.org/?page_id=21