Of note this year are projects tackling everything from cryptocurrency crime to climate action, from transnational repression to immigrant news infrastructure.
Given widespread misinformation and climate skepticism, veteran environmental reporters offer case studies and best practices ...
GIJN and iMEdD’s educational pillar, Ideas Zone, are coming together again to offer an introductory training program designed ...
In 2021, after a series of nationwide protests, the regime significantly tightened control over online content, and this ...
For refugee journalists who expose criminal networks, cross-border crimes, and sensitive failures within the camp system — safety and security protocols are poorly funded and inconsistent.
At GIJC25, reporters explained how remote sensing, open source verification, and visual forensics are now central to covering ...
The year 2025 was a groundbreaking moment for the Global Investigative Journalism Network. Here are some of the key metrics from all of our work around the world last year.
GIJN speaks to Rawan Damen, the director-general of ARIJ, about the impact of Trump’s funding decisions on their work in the Middle East — and how they have adapted to survive.
Expert follow-the-money journalists have documented how criminal networks now operate, via fluid, decentralized systems that are often indistinguishable from legitimate global commerce.
Researchers and journalists often need to verify user-generated video content from social networks and file sharing platforms, such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. But there is no silver bullet that ...