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THREE PROJECTS BY The Journal and its investigative platform The Journal Investigates have been nominated for the prestigious Mary Raftery Prize.
The prize is awarded annually to an individual or small team responsible for social affairs journalism produced in Ireland.
Of the five nominees on the shortlist, two are investigations carried out by The Journal Investigates, while The Journal received a nomination for journalist Saoirse McGarrigle’s work in highlighting the experiences of victims of prolific paedophile Micheal Shine.
Órla’s investigative series exposes how young people with psychosis are being forgotten by the Irish healthcare system. It was supported by the Rosalynn Carter Fellowship for Mental Health Journalism in partnership with Shine’s Headline programme.
Patricia’s investigation not only uncovered the brutal exploitation of wildlife, but also highlighted systemic gaps in enforcement of wildlife crime. Over the course of eight months, she carried out extensive undercover work to monitor and record the activities of illegal hunting networks operating across the country.
Órla and Patricia’s respective investigative series were overseen by editor of The Journal Investigates, Maria Delaney.
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She said the nominations “demonstrate the commitment of the investigative unit to social justice and public interest journalism”, and added:
“Órla, Patricia and our wider team dedicated significant time and resources in order to undertake this reporting. It is thanks to the supporters of The Journal that we are able to publish such work as we are funded by readers’ contributions.
“Thanks also to everyone who participated in each series, without which we wouldn’t have been able to bring these issues to light.”
Saoirse McGarrigle’s nomination for the prize comes from her work on keeping the stories of men sexually abused by former surgeon and convicted paedophile Micheal Shine alive within the public sphere.
Editor of The Journal, Sinéad O’Carroll, said: “It is an honour for our journalists to be considered a part of Mary Raftery’s legacy. Saoirse McGarrigle is, like Mary Raftery always was, compassionate but dogged in pursuit of truth and justice.
“She has centred the voices of Michael Shine’s victims while questioning the decisions and actions of the State and those in power.
“To be shortlisted for this prize is welcome recognition that this work needs to continue.”
The Irish Times has also received two nominations.
The full list of shortlisted nominees for the Mary Raftery Prize 2024 are:
Naomi O’Leary, Colm Keena, Enda O’Dowd, The Irish Times – ‘Under the eye of landlord Marc Godart: how a tenant who objected to CCTV surveillance was evicted’
Jack Power, The Irish Times – ‘Investigation into unregulated accommodation for children in care’
Saoirse McGarrigle, The Journal – ‘Group of victims of paedophile former surgeon Michael Shine speak out for the first time’
Órla Ryan, The Journal Investigates – ‘Falling Through the Cracks: Are young people with psychosis getting the help they need?’
Patricia Devlin, The Journal Investigates – ‘Wild Not Free: Is inaction on wildlife crime further threatening vulnerable species?’
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The Journal and The Journal Investigates (formerly known as Noteworthy) have won the Mary Raftery Prize on several occasions previously; last year, both scooped prizes as the winners for 2022 and 2023 were both announced.
Mary Raftery, a renowned investigative journalist, is best known for her documentaries States of Fear and Cardinal Secrets which detailed the sexual and physical abuse suffered by children in reformatories, industrial schools and similar settings.
The Prize, eponymously named in memory of the groundbreaking journalist following her death in 2012, consists of a medal engraved with the winner’s name and an award of €1,000.
The winner of the Prize will be announced on Thursday 27 March.
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Hillary Clinton died and went to heaven. As she stood in front of Saint Peter at the Pearly Gates, she saw a huge wall of clocks behind him. She asked, “What are all those clocks?” Saint Peter answered, “Those are Lie-Clocks. Everyone on Earth has a Lie-Clock. Every time you lie, the hands on your clock will move. “Oh,” said Hillary, “whose clock is that?” “That’s Mother Teresa’s. The hands have never moved indicating that she never told a lie.” “Whose clock is that?” “That’s Abraham Lincoln’s clock. The hands have only moved twice telling us that Abe only told 2 lies in his entire life.” “Where’s Bill’s clock?” Hillary asked. “Bill’s clock is in Jesus’ office. He’s using it as a ceiling fan.”
Scary piece of work. She’ll have the same old advisers her husband had and Bush and Obama pulling the war mongering strings from behind the scene and oiling the wheels of the military industrial complex bringing America to its knees while greasing the filthy palms of the same old oligarchs that run the world. Hilary is dangerous and she loves war and guns just doesn’t want them in the hands of ordinary people just the military machine they use to stomp all over other parts of the world if theres something they want., America is waking up slowly maybe thats why they want the guns, before the American people realise what these criminals are really about and use the guns on them.
I knew the networks where up to something dodge, with Clinton tipped to win because they all sunk money into her. But watch the second video taking about healthcare. Every time she talks there an audience clap edited in!?! Then listen to Bernie and the actual audience claps. This is absolutely ridiculous.
The head of the DNC is a Clinton supporter, helped run her previous campaign, and SHOCK HORROR, Debbie (the DNC chair) puts these debates on Sunday nights when nobody will watch! It can’t be that she’s trying to prevent Sanders from getting hay could it? Nah…
Carlin Ite: How can you say she is nasty like all of the republicans, just look at this video showing all the differences between Hillary and the republicans.
Not at all like here. Not even a little bit, and we should be really glad there is no such similarity, the more I see their politics and news the more I realize it, and am grateful for it.
-Over here free tuition fees and up (mostly) free ( and getting freeerr) healthcare is normal, over there its’ a socialist pipe dream fantasy
-Over here our cops have shot around 5 people in the last 10 years, none of them unarmed, over there it’s common for the person who calls 911 looking for help, or a family member, gets gunned down (usually unarmed)
-Over here we take instant run-off voting, proportional representation etc for granted, over there it’s a pipe dream
-Over here a Prime Minister has to resign for tapping journalists phones, over there they hoover up meta data from everyone and it’s abused all the time.
All the American hatred is just amazing , maybe all the American companies should leave Ireland ? Or maybe the thousands of Irish people welcomed there should leave ?
Republicans keep on knocking the very successful ‘Affordable Health Care Act’ ,which basically transfers the liability from the government to the individual ..Ironically, a Republican viewpoint.
Obamas healthcare plan was the plan Bob Dole replied to Clintons old plan with in the 90s, but to listen to them talk about it you’d swear it was collectivizing agriculture and nationalizing the local shops. It’s just universal private insurance, with govt subsidies, run through a central website where you choose your plans…that’s it. It does not even have a public insurance option (Obama didn’t try for one) and does not even cover everyone.
Obamacare (ACA) is an amalgam of many different ideas but most closely follows what Mitt Romney did in Massachusetts.Which is the real irony of the Republican position and one that Mitt Romney could not square in the last election.
You see public option or single payer is predicated upon an ideology of collectivism which Americans tend to shoot down, at least when it suits them. The rugged individualist, AKA the Lone Ranger, until stuff gets real, then it becomes “what benefits can I get from society”
The ACA is so much more than what you have described
First it ended exclusions from coverage people with pre-existing conditions
this was huge and saved countless lives
God forbid you get cancer, go to chemo, lose your job, then you were unable to get health insurance EVER AGAIN unless you worked for a company that offered health insurance that was not underwritten. Which means you were basically sentenced to a death sentence. Hospitals have to treat emergent care, i.e. the rod you inserted in your ass for thrills, but chemotherapy is considered preventative, so you die
secondly, there was a HUGE and I mean HUGE insurance product “fake insurance” whereby you paid $100 a month and it offered no benefits, other than the psychological benefit of saying “I got insurance” when in reality, you had insurance that offered no benefits if you actually needed to go to the doctor
Secondly, there was a HUGE insurance product “fake insurance” whereby you paid $100 a month and it offered no benefits, other than the psychological benefit of saying “I got insurance” when in reality, you had insurance that offered no benefits if you actually needed to go to the doctor and this is really the complaint of the people against Obamacare, they had to buy real insurance because the ACA established minimums.
Another thing ACA did was reform Medicare for cost savings,you have to roll them out NOW because with Medicare, they pay per condition, not per day..so the government says “a heart attack is worth 3 days” and that’s all they get. The flip side is if they discharge too fast and the unfortunate croaks HELLO LAWSUIT..
I know it’s funny stuff Permo. Remember the Irish when Obama got elected, was hilarious stuff but also highly cringe worthy. “yes we can” haha What has Obama done for those Irish people since he has been president of a foreign country? Nothing. Well I guess he has given Moneygall an extra few quid through tourism (which probably lasted a few months). I drove through the place once, diners and american flags everywhere. Cringe.
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