Q&A: Madeleine Baran on reinvestigating the Jacob Wetterling abduction December 22, 2016 By Elon Green
In separate investigations, CBS and The New York Times reveal the inner workings of Wounded Warrior Project January 28, 2016 By Jack Murtha
How NPR balanced privacy, open access in publishing names of 4,000 mustard gas victims November 9, 2015 By Jack Murtha
Can the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel sustain its ambitious journalism under a new owner? March 11, 2015 By Anna Clark
New survey reveals everything you think about freelancing is true February 17, 2015 By David Uberti Data from Project Word quantifies challenges of freelance investigative reporting
On media freedom, United Nations plays by its own rules September 15, 2014 By Chris Ip Months of international crises raises the stakes for reporting on the UN, but investigative journalists remain without a right to information
A TV news veteran brings a Chicago watchdog group back to life June 30, 2014 By Rui Kaneya Under Andy Shaw, the BGA has been reinventing itself–and turning heads
Hospitals find one more way to jack up healthcare costs March 13, 2014 By Trudy Lieberman A laurel to the Tampa Bay Times for its investigation of trauma center fees
How a top investigative team makes its stories stick November 26, 2013 By Anna Clark Every newsroom wants coverage with impact. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel shows how it’s done
How Wisconsin’s watchdogs kept their home July 1, 2013 By Anna Clark Investigative newsroom drew on a network of allies in successful bid for governor’s veto
Watch out, watchdogs June 5, 2013 By Anna Clark GOP-led Wisconsin legislature moves to push investigative journalists off campus
Accessible scandal coverage in Utah May 30, 2013 By Joel Campbell The Salt Lake Tribune continues to lead on the evolving Utah attorney general scandal–with help from some simple web tools
Citizen Wanes May 28, 2013 By John Mecklin The Bay Citizen brand winks out–and leaves behind a lesson about nonprofit governance
A laurel to Zahira Torres and the El Paso Times April 26, 2013 By Richard Parker Dogged investigative work exposed a test-score scandal that harmed students
Pulitzer surprise: the Sun Sentinel‘s rise to a gold medal April 18, 2013 By Roy J. Harris Jr. How a dark-horse series on police speeding won for public service
About those ‘Glory Days of American Journalism’ March 25, 2013 By Steven Waldman Matthew Yglesias retreats from his argument, but not far enough. He forgot state and local reporting.
Behind The Detroit News‘s deep dive on property taxes February 28, 2013 By Anna Clark Lead reporter Christine MacDonald discusses how the investigation came together