What is Investigative Reporting
- Establishing the facts
- The hidden areas
- General, specialist and investigative reporting
- Fighting readers’ battles
The Making of an Investigative Reporter
- The qualities required
- The path to investigation
- Back-up from the management
- Specialists and investigative reporting
- The freelance investigator
Insight and the Development of Techniques
- The insight method
- Shaking up the quality press
- Helping people
- Getting it right
- The switch to broadcasting
Finding the Stories
- Contacts and tip-offs
- A story to tell
- Windows on hidden places
- Between the lines
- A name remembered
- Does it make sense?
- A link with the past
- One thing leads to another
Pursuing Inquiries: Doing it Right
- The aim
- Doing it right
- Bringing in the lawyers
- Notebooks and tape recordings
- Discovery of documents
- The protection of privilege
- Injunctions
- In the public interest
Pursuing Inquiries: Getting it Right
- Is there a story?
- Standing up a story
- Facts from the public domain
Finding the People
- Talking to everyone relevant
- Find some experts
- Access by internet
- Whistleblowers and axe grinders
- Have a look
- The history
Dealing With Documents
- Fakes and hoaxes
- Checking for authenticity
- Responses and spoiling tactics
- Rebuttals that don’t rebut
Getting People to Talk
- Be a good talker
- Don’t be sharp
- The nine Rs of interviewing
- Reaction and denial
- Information through confrontation
- Going under cover
Writing It: Problems and Pitfalls
- Analysis of a court case
- Select facts fairly
- Libel
- Contract and confidentiality
- Journalists’ sources
- Privacy and media codes
- Investigation and its consequences
Looking Into Companies
- The freelance director-general
- Public record
- Report and accounts
- Business organisations
- Companies and the government
- Corrupt contracting
- Investigating success
Crime
- Dealing with the underworld
- Relations with the police
- Entrapment
- Burglary
Investigating Local Government
- Clues that indicate corruption
- Monitoring the councils
- Contacts and information
- Keeping a source secret
- Power that corrupts
- Sleaze
Example Candidate Response Booklet
Example Candidate Response (ECR) Booklets are a source of crucial information for Centres and Candidates as they use real candidate responses. We ask Senior Examiners to comment on five or more responses in terms of why the mark was awarded with commentary about how to improve the answer (if necessary).