IT’S A YEAR since we launched The Journal Investigates, our investigative unit supported by you, our readers. So, how have we got on?
Since last September, our team produced 28 major investigations, as well as numerous news articles, follow-ups and features. We consistently exposed injustice and drove change.
Building on the community-focused work of Noteworthy, our readers remain central to our work. Over the past year, you have continued to reach out to our team with tips, feedback and contributions – many of which led to groundbreaking findings.
The Journal / YouTube
Investigations like this don’t happen without your support… Impactful investigative reporting is powered by people like you.
Following our exposure of the ‘infiltration’ of the vaping industry in Ireland by ‘Big Tobacco’, one contributor to our readers’ fund wrote:
You’re doing a great job with important research & investigations in Ireland. Much needed.
Many people contacted us with their own stories, including this reader who had to travel abroad for an abortion:
Thank you for shedding a light on this. I am one of these women.
Feedback from NGOs, experts and those involved in the sectors we examined is also regularly received. Here a reader wrote to us following our article on unusual planning objections to vet practices:
Fantastic journalism. Fair play for looking into this.
Here are some highlights of the feedback we received in recent months through emails and supporter notes:
Consistent, challenging investigations
Our team published at least two investigations every month, with follow-up articles and news pieces in between.
The lead investigation article in each series was viewed an average of over 30,000 times.
NGOs and other experts highlighted our work over 125 times on social media. Multiple shoutouts were received by the National Women’s Council of Ireland (NWCI), the National Animal Rights Association (NARA), Irish Doctors for the Environment and the National LGBTQ+ Federation.
Four investigations featured on The Explainer podcast, including when our entire team joined presenter Laura Byrne to discuss our extensive vaping series which involved digging into lobbying records, undercover work and examination of financial accounts.
This ultimately led to our findings being cited in the Dáil this week during a debate on the use of vapes by young people.
Over 125 local and national radio interviews
A key focus for our team is ensuring our findings reach as many people across the country as possible. All our large investigations produced since September were picked up by other media outlets across the country.
This didn’t just happen when they were initially published. Numerous projects featured on national and local radio months after publication.
For example, in April – seven months after our Glen of Imaal investigation was published – RTÉ Radio 1′s Liveline discussed our findings and spoke to survivors, including Ron O’Neill who said of reporter Cormac Fitzgerald:
Only for Cormac… it would have stayed under the carpet.
In total, our reporters were interviewed 129 times by national and local outlets, with many also covering our investigations in articles and on news or talk shows.
Our team was on RTÉ Radio 1′s Morning Ireland three times and Drivetime four times. We have also been on Today FM’s The Last Word three times, Newstalk Breakfast seven times and Moncrieff once.
We were interviewed multiple times by Newstalk for its news bulletins which are broadcast on national and local stations.
A number of our investigations were collaborations with journalists across Europe, including with other members of the European Data Journalism Network (EDJNet) and PULSE.
These investigations received both national and international coverage. This included our recent Exporting Abortion project which featured on Virgin Media’s Ireland AM:
Ireland AM / YouTube
Our team really values local coverage of our work and this often results in real-life impact. To help with this, our reporters spoke on local radio shows across Ireland almost 90 times.
Teaming up with local outlets also allowed our work to reach new audiences. This included our investigation into maternity care in Sligo featured on the front page of the Sligo Weekender.
We reported that a €100,000 birthing suite was rarely used in Sligo University Hospital. The subsequent debate at local authority level has led to a public audit of the use of the suite, in a cross-party motion carried unanimously at Sligo County Council.
Sparking political debate
Multiple investigations resulted in reaction from politicians, including press releases by the Labour Party, Social Democrats and Sinn Féin. Many senators, TDs and MEPs also highlighted our articles on social media.
Our work was cited 12 times in the Dáil and Seanad over the past year.
That includes, then-TD Gino Kenny in the Dáil calling for a Government apology to be issued to victims of the 1979 explosion following our Glen of Imaal investigation. The Government’s badger cull programme was questioned in the chamber by Social Democrat TD Jennifer Whitmore and People Before Profit TD Paul Murphy.
When we exposed Irish investment in eight companies who have operations within occupied territories, Sinn Féin TD Mairéad Farrell called on the government to direct the divestment of any such funds.
Senator Eileen Flynn raised our investigation into reduced school days twice in the Seanad in March. Senators Patricia Stephenson and Ollie Crowe also cited our “shocking” figures on wait times for cancer care in July.
Our work was recognised with awards in recent months, including one of the most prestigious in Europe — the 2024 Daphne Caruana Galizia Prize for Journalism.
Our investigations were also shortlisted in two other international awards — the 2025 Sigma Awards which celebrate data journalism and the Steve Connor Award for Investigative Journalism from the Association of British Science Writers (ABSW). Of our work, the ABSW judges said:
A clear and poetic approach that makes the piece especially impactful.
Locally, we were shortlisted twice for the Mary Raftery Prize 2024. We won a merit award in the Justice Media Awards 2025 and won the Investigative Writing Award in the Irish Food Writing Awards 2024.
This is all entirely thanks to your support. Over the past year, our team spent countless hours sifting through thousands of documents, speaking to key sources and gathering information through Freedom of Information (FOI) and press requests.
As The Journal Investigates moves into its next year, you – our readers – will always be at the core of what we do. Please consider helping us continue to uncover stories that really matter to people.