Cart 0 $0.00
IRE favicon

Shop

$10.00

Description

The fourth quarter 2024 edition of The IRE Journal dives deep into disability issues with articles on newsroom inclusion, investigation backstories, beat-writing advice, global data sources, inequality coverage, newsrooms accessibility — and more.

Each print issue of The Journal features centerpiece stories and recurring departments that explore major news trends, techniques behind investigations, outstanding investigative work and core topics relevant to journalists. Print subscriptions to The Journal are included with IRE membership, and members may download archived past issues of the Journal for free when logged into the IRE website.

Nonmembers may purchase a digital copy for $10. Please contact Amy Eaton, IRE director of member services, at amy@ire.org to learn about subscription options.

Contributing writers in this special theme issue on disability issues: Francisco Vara-Orta (IRE & NICAR), Nakylah Carter (IRE & NICAR), Neelam Bohra (The Texas Tribune), Caroline Ghisolfi (Austin American-Statesman), Douglas Schepers (Fizz Studio) and Frank Elvasky (Carnegie Mellon University), Denise-Marie Ordway (The Journalist's Resource), Doug Meigs (IRE & NICAR), Mike Reicher and Lulu Ramadan (The Seattle Times), Amy Silverman (Arizona Daily Star), Beth Hundsdorfer and Molly Parker (Capitol News Illinois), Lygia Navarro (independent journalist) and Cara Reedy (Disabled Journalists Association), Emyle Watkins (GIJN), Jennifer LaFleur (UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism), Patrick Garvin (independent journalist and accessibility consultant), Julia Métraux (Mother Jones), Amanda Morris (The Washington Post). IRE Editorial Director Doug Meigs edited the issue.

About the cover: This Q4 2024 edition of The IRE Journal features the behind-the-scenes story of three collaborations with ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network. Emory Webster, 11, poses in the cover photo with her mother, Adiba Nelson, in their home in Tucson, Arizona. Webster was born with cerebral palsy. Nelson told journalist Amy Silverman that Emory was evaluated for a communication device in July 2019. But she was still trying to get the device through Arizona’s Developmental Disabilities Division in 2020, when Arizona Daily Star published Silverman’s investigation, “State of Denial,” in collaboration with ProPublica. Photo by Mamta Popat (Arizona Daily Star).

109 Lee Hills Hall, Missouri School of Journalism   |   221 S. Eighth St., Columbia, MO 65201   |   573-882-2042   |   info@ire.org   |   Privacy Policy
crossmenu linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram
My cart
Your cart is empty.

Looks like you haven't made a choice yet.