Deadline: 24 October 2024
Submissions are now open for the 19th Wole Soyinka Award for ethical reporting, courage, individual creativity and public benefit.
Categories
- Print
- Scan and upload a clean and clear original print copy of the story entry in PDF format through the online application portal.
- Provide the e-paper of relevant pages of published work(s) where available.
- Radio and Television
- Provide media organisation’s weblink of entry where available. Otherwise, upload the entry on SoundCloud for radio or YouTube for television and provide the weblink.
- Ensure the submitted entries have a “cue in” and “cue out” which are linked to the person making the main presentation on the media to prove that what is submitted was done in the media house it claimed to be.
- Include proof of the date and time of publication as documented in the day’s bulletin of the media house for the audio and video uploaded for all radio and television submissions respectively.
- Photography
- In addition to the broad criteria, photo entries will be scored on storytelling, creativity and originality, impact, density, and technical quality.
- Upload the original photo in the section required on the portal.
- For photos published in print, include a clean and clear scanned PDF copy of the full page of the published work showing the date of publication. Entrants are also encouraged to provide the electronic paper copy (e-copy) page(s) for the published work(s) where available.
- For photos from online news organisations, the URL (weblink) for the published work must be provided.
- Online
- Provide URL (weblink) for the published work or reports aired online.
- For web-based Television and Radio, please provide URL (weblink) to your broadcast work.
- Editorial Cartoon
- In addition to the broad criteria, editorial cartooning will also be scored on storytelling, creativity and originality, impact, and density.
- For cartoons published in print, provide a clean and clear scanned PDF copy of the full page where the published work appeared with date.
- Upload electronic copy (e-copy) page(s) for the published work(s) where available.
- For cartoons published online, the URL (weblink) for the published work must be provided.
Eligibility Criteria
- The award is open to any Nigerian professional reporter or team of reporters (fulltime or freelancers), 18-years and above, who have published stories either online, in print, or electronic media, primarily targeted at and received by a Nigerian audience.
- The main criterion for eligibility is that the work (single work or single-subject serial) must involve evidence-based investigative report 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 presentation. Such works should have been first published or broadcast in a Nigerian media.
Selection Criteria
- Due to the volume of entries, only reporters shortlisted as finalists will be contacted and announced after selection by the Judges’ Board.
- The reporter with the most outstanding work(s) amongst the finalists will be selected as the WSCIJ-Nigerian Investigative Reporter of the year.
- 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. Where the entry is in a Nigerian language, a transcript must be provided in English Language.
- 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 WSCIJ and the Nigerian and global media.
- To enhance the development of media in the country, reporters that have been winners in this competition on 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.
- The competition shall be covered and interpreted with the laws of Nigeria.
Judging Criteria
- A distinguished judges’ board, which comprises respected persons with suitable knowledge, competence and experience in news media practice, investigative reporting and ethics shall adjudge the competition.
- Every entry is coded to conceal media houses and reporter’s by-lines using the WSCIJ entry coding system before dispatch to judges.
- Members of the judges’ board can only assess, score or vote on works to which they have no organisational or family ties.
- All entries will undergo plagiarism test. Entries which fail the test will be disqualified.
- Due to WSCIJ’s commitment to excellence,  a category may not have a finalist(s)  if the entries in such a category are adjudged to have fallen below expected standards.
- The rigorous judging process uphold the integrity and reputation of the Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting 2024. The judges reserve the rights to disqualify any piece of work and/or finalist if, in the judges’ opinion, there exists reasonable doubt about the authenticity and/or accuracy of the submitted entry and/or the integrity of the finalists based on the set criteria.
- WSCIJ award recipients/winners (Soyinka Laureates, runners-up and commended works) are expected to be persons with high ethical and professional standards. The organisation reserves the rights to withdraw awards at any point in time based on the misconduct of an award recipient.
For more information, visit WSCIJ.