The Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN) is "an international association of nonprofit organizations that support, promote and produce investigative journalism."[1] The association is headquartered in the United States, and its membership is open to "nonprofits, NGOs, and educational organizations" that are active in investigative reporting and data journalism.[2][non-primary source needed]
The organisation's projects include a help desk to provide investigative journalists with advice and assistance, a resource center with tips, tools, and manuals, and large training conferences that have attracted over 5,000 journalists from 100 countries.[3][non-primary source needed]
In 2001, veteran journalists Brant Houston, then director of Investigative Reporters and Editors, and Nils Mulvad organized a conference of investigative 400 invetigative journalists from 40 countries in what would become GIJN.[4][5] GIJN was officially formed in Copenhagen as a loose network in support of the biennial Global Investigative Journalism Conference (GIJC).[6][7] The GIJN secretariat was officially formed after participants of the 7th GIJC in Kyiv voted for the formation of a provisional secretariat in 2013.[8][9][non-primary source needed] The organization registered as a nonprofit corporation in Maryland, United States of America, in 2014 and was approved as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service in October 2014.[10]Guidestar rated GIJN as 'Gold-level' for transparency of the organization's finances and leadership in 2023.[11]
In late 2023, GIJN was designated as "undesirable" in Russia.[12]
Membership is open to nonprofit journalism organizations, NGOs, educational organizations, and select for-profit organizations, while governments and individual reporters are not eligible to join.[2] While membership is free, it involves an application to GIJN's board as well as significant ongoing work in investigative journalism, participation in GIJN, and the upholding of GIJN's high journalistic standards.[2]
GIJN co-organizes a biennial Global Investigative Journalism Conference (GIJC), to bring together investigative journalists across the globe to share their knowledge and expertise with each other and to form cross-border networks for collaborative reporting and referrals.[18][19]
The GIJC has been held in Copenhagen in 2001 and 2003,[6] Amsterdam (2005),[20] Toronto (2007),[21] Lillehammer (2008),[22] Geneva (2010),[23] Kyiv (2011),[24] Rio de Janeiro (2013),[25] Lillehammer (2015),[26] Johannesburg (2017)[27] and Hamburg (2019). The latest conference was held in Gothenburg, Sweden in 2023.[28] In 2021, owing to the Coronavirus pandemic, the conference was held online only.[29]
Since 2014, GIJN has organized investigative journalism conferences in Asia. The first Asian Investigative Journalism Conference was held in Manila (2014),[30] the second in Kathmandu (2016),[31] and the third in Seoul (2018).[32]
GIJN gives out Global Shining Light Awards for excellence in investigative reporting "in a developing or transitioning country, done under threat, duress, or in the direst of conditions."[33]