In today's world, Correctiv is a topic that is constantly evolving and generates great interest in various areas. Whether in the scientific, cultural, technological or social field, Correctiv has become a point of reference and constant debate. Over time, it has become one of the most relevant topics on the public agenda, awakening the interest and curiosity of millions of people around the world. Without a doubt, Correctiv is a topic that leaves no one indifferent, and its impact is becoming increasingly evident in our society. In this article, we will explore some of the most relevant facets of Correctiv and discuss its importance in the current context.
German investigative journalism organisation
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (September 2019) Click for important translation instructions.
View a machine-translated version of the German article.
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Consider adding a topic to this template: there are already 2,262 articles in the main category, and specifying|topic= will aid in categorization.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at ]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|de|Correctiv}} to the talk page.
Correctiv (self-styled CORRECT!V) is a German nonprofitinvestigative journalism newsroom based in Essen and Berlin. It is run by CORRECTIV – Recherchen für die Gesellschaft gemeinnützige GmbH ("CORRECTIV – Investigations for the Society (Charitable Limited)"), which also runs the online journalism academy Reporterfabrik.[1]
Its stated goals are to provide free, independent journalism accessible to everyone. Furthermore, the collective aims to counter disinformation to strengthen democratic structures.[2][3]
Correctiv counts more than 70 employees and associates[4] and states to be the first nonprofit investigative center in Germany due to being exclusively financed by donations and fundings since 2014. The collective describes itself as an organization that is "one of the many answers to the media crisis."[3] Correctiv publishes reports in multiple languages beside German including Arabic, English, French, Russian and Turkish, via its website and partner outlets.
History
Correctiv was initiated in January 2014 by the charitable organization "Correctiv – Recherchen für die Gesellschaft" ("Correctiv – Research for Society") based in Essen with an initial financial support by the Brost Foundation with a grant of €1 million per year for three years.[5]
In 2017 Reporterfabrik, an independent journalism school was founded partly by people from the Correctiv collective. Correctiv continues to host and closely work with Reporterfabrik.[6]
Correctiv.Lokal, a network for joint research by local journalists, bloggers and experts, was launched in August 2018 together with the Rudolf Augstein Foundation.[7]
In May 2020, the Salon5 youth editorial team was founded with the support of the Ruhr Conference of the state government of North Rhine-Westphalia and the RAG Foundation.[8]
Correctiv is a nonprofit organization and exempt from taxation under German law. The funding comes largely from establishment foundations and corporations, such as the Open Society Foundations, Google Germany GmbH, and German Telekom,[10] as well as membership fees and donations from the users and readers. All donations of more than €1000 are listed on the website. Despite depending on establishment foundations and corporations for most of its funding, Correctiv claims to be "nonprofit, independent and investigative".[3]
Board of directors
David Schraven is the publisher and Jeannette Gusko the executive director.[11]
Editorial stance
Correctiv wants "to make investigative and informative journalism affordable and accessible to media organizations throughout Germany."[3]
Reports/Publications
Correctiv reported amongst other things on
"The System of Putin" (Dirty Money and State Collapse)[12]
"TTIP - The Deal" (Investigative, Analytic, Interactive: All about the Free Trade)[13]
Correctiv described the Flight MH17 as one of the greatest war crimes of modern times. Over several months it gathered facts, investigated in eastern Ukraine and Russia, and found witnesses to the missile launch, unveiled a clear chain of evidence that MH17 was downed by a BUK missile ground-launched by a unit of the Russian 53rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade from Kursk. The brigade unit operated in mid July on Ukrainian territory without displaying national emblems.[27][28]
In January 2024, Correctiv published a report titled "Secret Plan Against Germany" (German: "Geheimplan gegen Deutschland") that described a meeting between AfD and CDU members and far-right elements to plan a program of forced "re-migration" of immigrants and others considered undesirable.[29][30] The report led to mass demonstrations in Germany against AfD.[31]
2016: LeadAward in category Independent of the year[41]
2016: Axel Springer Preis in category "Investigation" for undercover feature "animal thieves"[42]
2016: Award "Innovation of the year" by Wirtschaftsjournalist magazine for developing the software CrowdNewsroom and the analysis of mutual banks "Sparkassen-Check"[43]
2017: ERM-Media Award for sustainable development. Award for Fabian Löhe and Annika Joeres for Correctiv[44]
2018: Franco-German Journalism Award for the project "searise" by Annika Joeres and Simon Jockers for Correctiv[45]
2018: Journalist award by Apothekerstiftung Westfalen Lippe for reporting on "Alte Apotheke"[47][48]
2018: Otto-Brenner-Preis for journalism for the works "Er kommt am Abend" and "Vergewaltigt auf Europas Feldern" by Pascale Müller (Correctiv) and Stefania Prandi (BuzzFeed)[49]
2018: Umweltmedienpreis by Deutsche Umwelthilfe for the project "Irrsinn der Agrarpolitik"[50] by Justus von Daniels, Stefan Wehrmeyer and Annika Joeres for Correctiv
2019: Nannen Prize [de] in feature for article "Vergewaltigt auf Europas Feldern" by Pascale Müller (Correctiv) and Stefania Prandi (BuzzFeed)[51][52]
2020: Deutsch-Französischer Journalistenpreis in the category „Multimedia“ for their reporting on tax evasion[53]
2023: Reporter:innen-Preis 2023 in the category of „Data Journalism“ for an investigation about the state of women's shelters[54]