Investigative journalism / Hugo de Burgh with Paul Bradshaw ... [et al.]. - 2nd ed. - Abingdon, Oxon. : New York : Routledge, 2008. - xi, 402 p. ; 24 cm.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1 Introduction
HUGO DE BURGH
Contacts: contact details of some organizations,
sites and publications useful to investigative journalists
STEVEN McIntosh
2 The emergence of investigative journalism
HUGO DE BURGH
3 Forty years: a tradition of investigative journalism
HUGO DE BURGH
4 The Blair years; mediocracy and investigative journalism
HUGO DE BURGH
5 Investigative journalism-and blogs
PAUL BRADSHAW
6 Investigative journalism and English law
CHRIS HORRIE
7 The English Freedom of Information Act
CHRIS HORRIE
8 The practices of investigative journalism
GAVIN MacFADYEN
9 Universities as evangelists of the watchdog role: teaching
investigative journalism to undergraduates
MARK HANNA
10 Investigative journalism and scholarship
MICHAEL BROMLEY
11 From shadow boxing to Ghost Plane: English journalism
and the War on Terror
PAUL LASHMAR
12 High politics and low behaviour: Sunday Times Insight
HUGO DE BURGH
13 Investigating corporate corruption: an example from
BBC's File on Four
HUGO DE BURGH
14 Panorama — investigative TV?
IVOR GABER
15 Scrutinizing social policy: an example from Channel 4's
Dispatches
HUGO DE BURGH
16 Journalism with attitude: the Daily Mail
HUGO DE BURGH
17 Exposing miscarriages of justice: an example from
BBC's Rough Justice
HUGO DE BURGH
18 Local power and public accountability: an example from
the East Midlands
MARK D'ARCY
19 Subterfuge, set-ups, stings and stunts: how red-tops
go about their investigations
ROY GREENS LADE
20 Pillaging the environmentalists: Tlie Cook Report
HUGO DE BURGH
21 Grave-digging: the case of' the Cossacks'
HUGO DE BURGH
22 Interfering with foreigners; An example from First Tuesday
HUGO DE BURGH

9780415441438 (hbk : alk. paper)


Investigative Reporting.

070.43 / BUR/I