2017 Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting for Nigerian journalists

Application Deadline: Tuesday, 24 October 2017 by 4pm.

The Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism is calling for applications for the 12th edition of Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting. Nigerian journalists or team of journalists, full or part-time, with stories published between 4th Octobera 2016 and 3rd October 2017, can apply for opportunity.

This award seeks to honour journalism works from the print, online, photo, editorial cartoon, television, and radio categories in general. The submitted reports must involve in-depth coverage of clandestine activities on public and or corporate corruption, human rights abuses, or on regulatory failures in Nigeria.

In addition to the broad categories, WSCIJ in collaboration with Oxfam, an organisation dedicated to working to end the injustices that cause poverty, has included a special prize for reporting agriculture and food security in this year’s edition. The prize, which is part of a larger programme, will serve as an encouragement to reporters who are dedicated to reporting the focus area.

Received entries will be collated using the award coding system and assessed by a panel of media experts and related professionals with good understanding of investigative reporting. Judges would broadly score stories based on quality of investigation, evidence, human rights elements, ethical reportage, courage, individual creativity, public interest, impact and quality of presentation.

ELIGIBILITY

The Award is open to any Nigerian professional reporter or team of reporters (full time or freelancers), 18-years and above, who have published stories either online, in print, or through electronic media primarily targeted at and received by a Nigerian audience.

CATEGORIES

  • Print
  • Radio
  • Television
  • Photography
  • Online
  • Editorial cartoon

CRITERIA
The main criterion for eligibility is that the work (single work or single-subject serial) must involve reporting on public, and or corporate corruption, human rights violation, or on the failure of regulatory agencies. The story should reflect a high quality of investigation in terms of newsworthiness, capacity to expose or prevent clandestine activities, corruption in the public domain, an understanding of human rights implications enhanced by the quality of delivery/presentation/writing. Such works should have been first published or broadcast in a Nigerian media between 4 October 2016 and 3 October 2017.

Generally

  • Entry is free.
  • Only a maximum of two entries across all categories of the award will be allowed per entrant.
  • All submitted works must be in English Language.
  • The reporter with the most outstanding work(s) amongst the finalists will be selected as the WSCIJ-Nigerian Investigative Reporter of the year.
  • Entering for this competition commits you to grant WSCIJ a worldwide, perpetual, royalty-free licence to use your works for any purpose deemed appropriate for the development of the award initiative, the Centre and the Nigerian and global media.
  • To enhance the development of media in the country, reporters that have been winners in this competition on at least three occasions are ineligible to enter.
  • Employees of the WSCIJ and/or their immediate families are ineligible to participate in the competition.
  • WSCIJ guarantees that there is no connection between any sponsor and the judging process despite possible sponsorship of some categories of the award.
  • The competition shall be covered and interpreted with the laws of Nigeria.

SUBMISSION

The submitted package should include:

  • A brief synopsis of the story/series, picture, or portfolio.

In the synopsis, the applicant is expected to:

  • Explain the background of the project, identifying the issues and key players.
  • Describe what led to the topic or caption, any unusual condition faced in developing the project and whether the investigation had any ramifications.
  • Describe challenges to the content of the story/series that were not reported in the original work.
  • Include up-to-date curriculum vitae for every reporter who bears the byline of the story with passport photograph(s)
    Include any relevant background information on submitted work(s)

NOTE

  • Synopsis should be in English and a maximum of 400 words.
  • All submissions (apart from the online entry where submission is to be made by email should be in hard copy for all categories.

Application Procedure:

  • The deadline for the submission of applications is Tuesday, 24 October 2017 by 4pm.
  • All entries, apart from the online categories which must be sent by email to entries@wscij.org, must be delivered to the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism office, Second Floor, No 18A Abiodun Sobajo Street, Off Lateef Jakande Road, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos.

For More Information:

Visit the Official Webpage of the 2017 Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting

Related posts

Prince Claus Fund Building Beyond Mentorship Programme 2024 for mid-career creatives. (Fully Funded to the Netherlands)

The IUCN Leaders Forum 2024 for Young Changemakers (Fully Funded to Geneva, Switzerland)

The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) Kenya Political Leadership and Governance Programme (PLGP) 2024 for young Kenyans.

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More Info