PRESS RELEASE
In a bid to contribute to
addressing the dearth of the culture of investigative reporting in Nigeria and
globally, the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism has initiated
the House-to-House project under its Pro-Engage Series programme.
House-to-House, done in partnership with the British High Commission, is
conceived as an investigative reporting desk advocacy programme.
The pilot training sessions of
House-to-House will run from Monday 19 to Friday 30
January 2015. The meetings are planned to achieve improved focus on
investigative journalism for eight media houses headquartered in Lagos and
Abuja namely – The New Telegraph, Media Trust, The Leadership, The Nation, The
Guardian, The Premium Times, The News and Television Continental.
Wole Soyinka
Centre staff alongside its faculty comprising veteran investigative journalism
professionals will go from one media house to the other to conduct capacity
development training for members of staff.
This will be followed up by a
full-day workshop for four representatives each from the shortlisted media
houses on running investigative reporting desks.
The Pro-Engage Series was first
introduced in 2011 with the aim of expanding knowledge in investigative
journalism and increasing the level of mentoring and discourses around the
subject for student and beginner journalists.
It
was aimed at creating an opportunity for budding investigative journalists to
learn from respected professionals and discuss issues peculiar to their cadre
in media learning and practice.
The programme has now been expanded to
encompass engagement between professionals and veterans in and outside the
media for the improvement of investigative reporting culture in the Nigerian
media.
The House-to-House variant of
the Pro-Engage Series is hoped to contribute to the thoroughness of news
reporting and better position the Nigerian media to effectively do its part in
shaping the polity.
At the end of the pilot project, the Wole Soyinka
Centre for Investigative Journalism and its partner the British High Commission
would have directly reached at least one hundred and fifty journalists with the
advocacy for investigative reporting.
Motunrayo Alaka
Centre
Coordinator
No comments:
Post a Comment