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Peter Hitchens has won the 2010 Orwell Prize for political writing .

The awards in association with the Media Standards Trust, the Orwell Trust and Political Quarterly, awards a Book Prize, a Journalism Prize and a Blog Prize to recognise works that 'achieve George Orwell's ambition to make political writing into an art'.

Hitchens beat competition from the Guardian's Amelia Gentleman and Paul Lewis, and the Sunday Times' John Arlidge to take the accolade.

Anonymous care worker 'Winston Smith' took the award in the blogging category, for his site http://winstonsmith33.blogspot.com/ . This is the second year running that an anonymous blogger has won the prize following Richard Horton or NightJack's win in 2009 . Smith won the Blog Prize ahead of Sky News' foreign affairs editor Tim Marshall, who received a nod in the shortlist for his Foreign Matters blog alongside legal issues blogger Jack of Kent.

Andrea Gillies took the book prize for her work 'Keeper', while Norma Percy was given a lifetime achievement award. An additional and new prize, the Bernard Crick Prize, awarded for the best essay in Political Quarterly, went to Francesca Klug, director of the human rights project at the London School of Economics.

The full shortlist for this year's prizes is listed below:

Journalism Prize

John Arlidge, Sunday Times (Magazine, News Review)

Amelia Gentleman, Guardian (G2)

Peter Hitchens, Mail on Sunday

Paul Lewis, Guardian

Anthony Loyd, Times; Standpoint

Hamish McRae, Independent

David Reynolds, BBC (Radio 4, News Online)

Blog Prize

Hopi Sen, Hopi Sen Jack of Kent, Jack of Kent Laurie Penny, Penny Red and others Madam Miaow, Madam Miaow Says Tim Marshall, Foreign Matters Winston Smith, Working with the Underclass

Book Prize

Christopher De Bellaigue, 'Rebel Land: Among Turkey's Forgotten Peoples'

Petina Gappah, 'An Elegy for Easterly'

Andrea Gillies, 'Keeper'

John Kampfner, 'Freedom For Sale: How We Made Money and Lost Our Liberty'

Kenan Malik, 'From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Legacy'

Michela Wrong, 'It's Our Turn to Eat: The Story of a Kenyan Whistle Blower'

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Written by

Laura Oliver
Laura Oliver is a freelance journalist, a contributor to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, co-founder of The Society of Freelance Journalists and the former editor of Journalism.co.uk (prior to it becoming JournalismUK)

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