Our RSS feeds
LATEST JOBS:
resize text: decrease text sizereset text size increase text size

Online Journalism News

Gloomy future for investigative journalism

The internet is a great place to publish investigative journalism but newspapers don't know how to make money from their sites, Guardian journalist David Leigh told the Global Investigative Journalism Conference last week.

Speaking at the opening of the conference in Amsterdam, he gave a pessimistic assessment of the future of investigative journalism in the UK and Europe by describing its list of 'enemies'. As newspaper readership continues to fall and advertising revenue falters, he says newspaper editors are cutting costs and investigative units are often the first to suffer.

Mr Leigh, Guardian Assistant Editor with responsibility for investigations, said newspapers are increasingly turning to 'lifestyle' content and human interest to fill new tabloid formats. "But the more there is of that, the less room there is for what some people don't want published," he told more than 400 journalists from around 50 countries.

Investigations are being marginalised in newspapers, he claimed, and concerns about profitability are limiting the potential of publishing these projects online.

His most stinging criticism was directed at newspapers that publish what he called 'pseudo investigations' on issues such as conspiracies surrounding the death of Diana. He said these 'pseudo investigations’ were getting more common and 'degraded the concept of journalism'.

Other enemies of investigative journalism include the law of libel in the UK, the Government and powerful corporations. He said investigative journalists in the UK are suffering from a lack of resources, hostility and sometimes danger. He said that too often there was a very thin line between success and a crippling lawsuit.

More news from journalism.co.uk:
Analysis: Computer-assisted reporting leaves UK journalists in the slow lane
Commitment, not cash, is key to investigative journalism
Investigative journalists descend on Amsterdam

Got a story? Email our news team: Laura Oliver; Judith Townend or telephone +44 (0)1273 384290. You can also follow us on Twitter: @journalismnews / @LauraOliver / @JTownend.

blog comments powered by Disqus


JOB OF THE WEEK

Group news and features writer

Could you hunt out stories from around the world across a range of business activities from Telecoms to Hollywood via the World Cup Finals? ...more

Freelancers for hire

...see all

DISPLAY ADVERTISING

image

Target our journalism community of 17,200 subscribers and 140k+ visitors monthly. Call Chris on 01273 384291

Advertisements

How fast is your broadband?

Broadband Speed

Test your speed now

Click for
mobile broadband deals from Mobile Broadband Genie


Compare Broadband

Alternatively take a look at mobile broadband packages.