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    Investigative journalism is a kind of journalism in which reporters deeply investigate a topic of interest, often involving crime, political corruption, or some other scandal.


    -Tony Burman, editor-in-chief of CBC News


    An investigative journalist may spend a considerable period researching and preparing a report, sometimes months or years, whereas a typical daily or weekly news reporter writes items concerning immediately available news. Most investigative journalism is done by newspapers, wire services and freelance journalists. An investigative journalist's final report may take the form of an exposé.


        Investigative journalism
            The Investigation
            Examples
            See also

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    The Investigation
    The investigation will often require an extensive number of interviews and travel; other instances might call for the reporter to make use of activities such as surveillance techniques, tedious analysis of documents, investigations of the performance of any kind of equipment involved in an accident, patent medicine, scientific analysis, social and legal issues, and the like. In short, investigative journalism requires a lot of scrutiny of details, fact-finding, and physical effort. An investigative journalist must have an analytical and incisive mind with strong self-motivation to carry on when all doors are closed, when facts are being covered up or falsified and so on.

    Some of the means reporters can use for their fact-finding:
      studying neglected sources, such as archives, phone records, address books, tax records and license records

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    Examples
        In 1959, John Howard Griffin, a caucasian, changed the color of his skin and traveled in the U.S.'s Deep South as an African-American, later writing a series of articles for Sepia magazine and then his famous book.



      The Iron Fist

      Revelation$, about Clearstream, which has been called the "biggest financial scandal in Luxembourg" and was discovered by ex-Clearstream banker Ernest Backes who co-authored a book about it with French journalist Denis Robert.

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    See also
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Investigative journalism". link