Ashley Nguyen
Investigative
journalists often look to numbers to back up or fuel their reports,
but the data they need can't always be found in a tidy spreadsheet or
gathered straight from a source.
"As
a journalist obviously your main tool is talking to people; it’s being
able to ask the right questions of the right people," said ICFJ
Knight Fellow Friedrich Lindenberg in a recent webinar on digital tools for investigative
reporting.
"That’s still true in many ways, but now you can ask the
right questions of the right databases. You can ask the right questions using
the right tools."
The
ICFJ Anywhere - Dow Jones Foundation webinar helped to narrow
down that ever-growing list of resources for journalists, exploring tools
that simplify ways to search laborious documents and turn PDFs into
data-friendly visuals.
Analyze,
search and release documents
DocumentCloud lets users track where
people or companies appear in documents and how often, making it a useful
service when combing through court or legal documents, Lindenberg said. Rather
than looking through 200-plus pages of information, reporters can jump directly
to areas of the document regarding the person or company in question.
News
organizations and journalists have used the tool to examine and publicly
release everything from WikiLeaks documents to city contracts
to rarely seen reports and memos.
You
can use DocumentCloud to:
- Comb through other documents posted publicly by news organizations
- Privately view documents
- Share documents with the public or with other reporters
- Add notes to documents by commenting or highlighting passages
- Embed portions of the document directly into your news article online
The
tool began as a joint project between ProPublica and The New
York Times but is now run by the Investigative Reporters and Editors.
To use the tool, you need to have an affiliation with a news organization.
But
Lindenberg encouraged journalists interested in using the service to simply email him. Lindenberg and
Code for Africa are developing a similar tool called sourceAFRICA,
and he’s willing to let you try it out. (DocumentCloud is open source, so
others can use its code to create similar products.)
Lindenberg
also recommended Overview, which
sorts information in your documents by counting how frequently words or themes
appear in texts. You can tag similarities you find and create visualizations
based on the information. Anyone can use the tool by importing documents
from DocumentCloud or directly uploading PDFs.
Find
out more about companies
If
you're investigating a certain company and need to find more information, try OpenCorporates.
The free database system allows users to search through about 55 million
registered companies in more than 75 jurisdictions. Using this tool, you’re
also able to see if a director owns other entities than his or her main
company.
If
you’re in the United Kingdom or reporting on business there, you can also try DueDil. It’s
similar to OpenCorporates but is specifically for businesses in the UK.
If
you want to dig into contracts, go to Investigative
Dashboard. You’ll be able to find where certain governments
do business with private companies and explore who owns certain intellectual
properties. You can also find links to additional online databases with
information about businesses and who runs them.
The
best part about Investigative Dashboard, Lindenberg added, is you might be able
to interact with other humans using its research desk. If part of your
reporting is based in another country, you can ask other journalists and researchers
to do additional digging you can’t do remotely.
Get
data
Calling
it the “gateway drug to data journalism,” Lindenberg recommended Tabula to
help you extract data from PDFs.
Tabula
will pull out statistics and tables in long documents, and also lets you
convert a PDF table of data into a spreadsheet where you can see the
formulas behind the final numbers.
Keep
learning
The
School of Data
has free online courses for those new to working with data and for
experienced pros. You can also read up on the latest in data journalism by
subscribing to NICAR-L’s newsletter.
Visit
Friedrich's website for a full list of vetted tools for investigative journalists.
You can also view the full ICFJ Anywhere - Dow Jones Foundation webinar
below.
Friedrich
Lindenberg is an ICFJ Knight International Journalism Fellow who works
with journalists and watchdog organizations to develop data resources and
investigative tools.
Main
image CC-licensed by Flickr via Open Knowledge
Source:
http://ijnet.org

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