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Thursday, March 24th, 2011
The Workshop launched an e-newsletter this month to keep you up-to-date on our staff and our projects. To subscribe, go here: http://investigativereportingworkshop.org/subscribe/
http://investigativereportingworkshop.org/subscribe/
" />Thursday, March 24th, 2011
The Workshop launched an e-newsletter this month to keep you up-to-date on our staff and our projects. To subscribe, go here: http://investigativereportingworkshop.org/subscribe/
Incubating new economic models for journalism.
Japanese journalists have been training citizens in North Korea to take audio and video recordings of everyday life in an effort to document the hardships, including food shortages, prevalent there. Meet the man behind the training, Jiro Ishimaru.
A zero-tolerance policy and a set of new rules to protect against sexual assault and rape in prisons nationwide were announced Thursday by the Justice Department. The new rules come nearly a decade after Congress mandated new rape protections for those behind bars under the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) of 2003. But the new regulations won't immediately impact the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees immigration detention centers, as it still has 120 days to write its own rules to comply with PREA and another 240 days to finalize them.
The Knight Foundation has taken a major step in promoting transparency by requiring journalism and nonprofit grant seekers to disclose more information about their donors.
Charles Lewis, executive editor of the Investigative Reporting Workshop, remembers Mike Wallace. Lewis worked alongside Wallace at "60 Minutes."
Next week is the annual Sunshine Week observance, reminding us of the importance and value of open government.
An overview of the National Institute of Computer-Assisted Reporting Conference.
We publish online and in print, often teaming up with other news organizations. We post quarterly updates to our BankTracker project, in which you can view the financial health of every bank and credit union in the country, with msnbc.com, and we co-publish stories in our What Went Wrong project with The Philadelphia Inquirer and New America Media. Learn more on our partners page.
Donald Barlett and James Steele are revisiting America: What Went Wrong, their landmark 1991 newspaper series, in a new project with the Investigative Reporting Workshop. Over the next year, the project team will examine how four decades of public policy has shaped America's ongoing economic crisis.