
Inside GIJN
GIJN 2024 Board Election Results: Four Incumbents Re-Elected, Three New Members
In all, 13 candidates vied for seven seats on the 15-member board. Board members serve for two years.
In all, 13 candidates vied for seven seats on the 15-member board. Board members serve for two years.
This October and November, GIJN member representatives will vote to elect three regional representatives and four at-large directors for the 15-person Board of Directors.
New members include organizations doing crucial watchdog work in areas from deforestation to African data journalism capacity to the exploitation of child migrants.
Nominations are open for three regional representatives, and for four at-large director positions on the board.
Among our new members, a media training outlet in Uganda – GIJN’s first from the country — a UK-based newsroom investigating land use, and a Russian unit working in exile.
GIJN officially protests having been flagged as an “undesirable” organization by the Russian Ministry of Justice.
GIJN is now accepting simultaneous proposals to host its next two Global Investigative Journalism Conferences in 2025 and in 2027.
As we prepare to gather for this year’s Global Investigative Journalism Conference, it seems a good time to share where GIJN and its conferences come from.
GIJN Advisory Services has launched the Investigative Journalism Assessment Program (IJ-MAP), which allows us to offer a free, in-depth assessment of an organization, and follow up with expert advice from media consultants in priority areas such as investigative reporting, data journalism, revenue development, and digital audience reach.