Current Node: Ekalavya Hansaj
Desk: Press
Status: Online
Dossier format: Long
Contact: Fast routing
Press desk for investigations and inquiries

Press & Media

We run a global investigative network with 1,000+ outlets and 25,000+ publishing properties that share one evidence workflow today worldwide. Our dossiers are long by design, usually 15,000–40,000 words, built as readable case files with sources protected at every step. Across content labs and studios, we publish text, audio, video, and data visuals so journalists can move fast with clarity.
1,000+
Investigative outlets
25,000+
Publishing properties
15k–40k
Words per dossier
20+
Languages
80+
Countries and regions
Quarterly
Metrics refresh
Media Inquiries
Press contact
Email is the fastest path. Use a clear subject line and include your deadline so we route it without delay. If you are referencing a specific dossier, include the link in the first line.
Reply timing and urgent routing
Typical replies land within one business day. If your deadline is under six hours, put “URGENT” in the subject.
If you need an interview slot, email the briefing desk so it reaches the right person on the first pass.
What you can contact us for
Pick the closest reason below. If you are unsure, choose the one that matches your intent, not your job title.
Interview requests
Talk to our editors, analysts, or bureau leads about a specific dossier or theme.
Syndication
Ask about distribution rights and partner pickup for a dossier package.
Republishing
Get permission rules, attribution format, and excerpt limits in writing.
Data requests
Request a dataset view when we can share without harming sources or ongoing work.
Corrections
Point out a clear error with proof, and we will review it quickly and update transparently.
Partnership inquiries
Propose joint work where evidence standards and safety rules match.
Sponsorships
Ask about disclosed sponsorship paths that do not break editorial independence.
Licensing Services
Request brand and content licensing with clean usage boundaries.
Consulting Services
Ask for structured advisory support around media, publishing, or narrative risk.
Research Intelligence
Commission a research brief when you need proof, not headlines.
Media Intelligence
Request monitoring and signal tracking across our wider publishing surfaces.
News Agency Services
Ask for desk-to-desk delivery of story packets and supporting files.
B2B Agency Services
Ask for a commercial plan built for serious buyers and real response.
White Label Research
Commission a report you can use internally with clear sourcing discipline.
Digital Solutions
Ask about tech build-outs that support publishing and audience trust.
Media Buying
Plan placement across many nodes with one point of contact.
Advertising
Buy inventory with brand-safe rules and clean disclosure.
Subscriptions
Ask about paid access, enterprise access, and reader support options.
Donations
Support investigations with clear separation from editorial decisions.
Management
Route questions about ownership, governance, and network operations.
Press Kit
How downloads work on this page
Step one: enter your email. Step two: we check that it is a valid and genuine email address. Step three: you get an 8‑digit code. Step four: enter the code and the PDF is emailed to you within one business day by one of our senior partners.
Organization Fact Sheet
Request a PDF with core facts, scale, routing details, and citation-ready background.
Leadership Bios
Request a PDF with short and long leadership bios plus the correct routing contacts.
Brand Assets
Request a PDF that points to logo sources, palette references, and usage guidance.
Approved Boilerplates
Request a PDF with approved 50/100/200-word boilerplates for clean, consistent attribution.
Impact & Reach Metrics
Request a PDF with headline reach metrics and how to request the full quarterly packet.
Methodology & Editorial Standards
Request a PDF summarizing methodology, verification standards, and the policy link for deeper review.
About Our Investigative Media Network
Why we publish dossiers
A short story can hide the record. A dossier keeps the full chain of proof in one place so the public can check it.
How the network is built
Outlets work as linked desks. We share standards, editing rules, and safety practices, while publishing across many properties.
What “evidence-led” means here
We do not treat rumors as facts. We chase documents, match timelines, cross-check witnesses, and publish what holds up.
Coverage beats
Corruption, corporate accountability, public spending, environment harm, conflict finance, courts, and influence systems.
Geography and languages
Our desks operate across countries and regions. Language coverage expands as local teams publish and translate.
What makes us different
This is not a guest-post site. It is a global investigative infrastructure built for long work, hard questions, and clear proof.
How We Work
Dossier framework
A dossier usually includes a timeline, key exhibits, interviews, analysis, and an appendix so readers can follow each link.
Verification rules
We confirm claims by cross-checking sources, reviewing documents, cleaning data, and asking experts to test what is stated.
Source safety
We collect only what we need, store sensitive material carefully, and keep access narrow so leaks do not become harm.
Legal review and risk checks
We review meaning, proof strength, and right-of-reply needs before publishing, especially when stakes are high.
Corrections and updates
When new proof arrives, we update the dossier and mark the change so the public can see what moved and why.
Independence and conflicts
Funding and partnerships do not control what we report. Disclosures and boundaries are written so readers know the line.
Why these are listed here
Long work is hard to enter from the outside. These are chosen for depth, size, and how often others cite and follow them.
Cult Indoctrination On Social Media: The Algorithmic Architecture of Digital Coercion Investigation Till 2025
Digital coercion operates through precise algorithmic architecture. Recommendation engines prioritize engagement over user safety. These systems feed users increasingly extreme content to maximize watch time. A 2025 YouGov survey confirms that 56 percent of Americans recognize social media platforms frequently engage in coercive behavior. The operations of this radicalization are measurable. Platforms track likes, shares, […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
Think Tank Sponsored Research Bias Investigation: Data Between 2015-2025 Points To An Illusion Of Independence
Think tank sponsored research bias occurs when financial contributions from corporations, foreign governments, or defense contractors dictate the research outcomes or policy recommendations of an ostensibly independent research institution. The Quincy Institute launched a Think Tank Funding Tracker in early 2025 to monitor these financial streams. Between 2019 and 2024, the United States government directly […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
The Decline of Public Libraries in USA And The 2026 State of Public Library Decays: Funding Cuts and Censorship
The American public library system entered 2026 in a state of physical and ideological decomposition. Data collected through late 2025 reveals the decline of public libraries in USA buckling under the dual weight of infrastructure collapse and organized political siege. While municipal leaders frequently praise libraries as community anchors, the metrics tell a different story: […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
Religious Exemption Exploitation In Healthcare: Investigating Faith And Medicine Data Between 2015-2025
The dossier argues that religious exemptions in U.S. healthcare expanded sharply from 2015 to 2025, affecting vaccination policy, hospital mergers, reproductive care, end-of-life treatment, and LGBTQ care. It presents data on rising nonmedical vaccine exemptions and the growing reach of Catholic health systems, which it says increasingly shape access to care through religious directives. It […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
Manufactured Cancel Culture: The Weaponisation of Social Media And The Monetisation Of Outrage Until 2026
Social media has mutated from a public square into a theater of asymmetric warfare. What began in 2017 as a necessary method for accountability, exemplified by the #MeToo movement, has devolved by 2026 into a weaponized system of coordinated destruction and manufactured cancel culture. The data is clear: the objective is no longer justice but […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
Investigation: The Salt Typhoon State-Sponsored Espionage Campaigns until 2026
The entity as “Salt Typhoon” represents a specific, highly disciplined cluster of cyber-espionage activity attributed to the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Unlike the noisy, disruptive ransomware gangs that dominate headlines, Salt Typhoon state-sponsored espionage campaign operates with the quiet precision of a foreign intelligence service. Its primary directive is not financial gain or immediate […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
The Cost of US-China Trade War: Investigating Impact on Consumer Prices Between 2018-2026
The economic conflict frequently labeled the “US-China Trade War” has metastasized from a diplomatic use strategy in 2018 into a permanent structural feature of the American economy by 2026. What began with Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum under the Trump administration evolved through the Biden years, marked by the retention of levies and […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
Human Trafficking Industrialisation: The Cyber-Recruitment Shift And The Rise of “Pig Butchering”
The physical “stroll” is dead. The bus station recruiter has been replaced by the direct message. Between 2015 and 2025, human trafficking operations underwent a total migration from physical environments to digital platforms. This shift in human trafficking industrialisation is not a change in venue. It is an industrial scaling of exploitation. Data from the […]
Journalists Can Request an executive summary PDF for this dossier using the Request button below
Republish / Syndication / Licensing
Republishing rules
Permission is required unless a specific written license states otherwise. Ask first, and you get a clear yes or no.
Attribution format
Use: outlet name, dossier title, year, and direct URL. Do not remove the meaning or shorten quotes to change intent.
Embargo coordination
If a release time is agreed, stick to it. Breaking timing can harm sources and break future cooperation.
Asset usage
Charts, images, and excerpts have rules. Ask for the clean pack so you do not publish a cropped or misleading version.
Syndication path
Send the dossier link, your outlet name, where you will publish, and the exact text you want to carry.
Licensing rules
Our licensing rules define what can be used, how it must be attributed, and what requires written approval before publication.
FAQs
Why do you publish dossiers instead of short articles?
Because a short write-up can miss the paper trail. A dossier holds the full record, step by step, in one place.
How do you handle right-of-reply?
When a dossier names people or organizations, we try to request their response before publication when it is safe to do so.
Do you name sources?
Sometimes we can. When naming a source would put them at risk, we describe what we can without exposing them.
What do you publish and what do you hold back?
We publish what is needed to support the claim, and we hold back details that could harm people, sources, or active work.
How do updates work on a long dossier?
Updates are added when new proof arrives. The dossier is revised so readers can see the stronger picture, not a broken thread.
How do corrections get handled?
If something is wrong, we review the proof, fix the error, and mark the correction so readers can track the change.
Can I request underlying documents or data?
You can ask. We share when we can do it without harming safety, confidentiality, or ongoing reporting.
Can I quote from a dossier in my reporting?
Yes, with proper citation and without changing meaning. For longer excerpts, request permission.
Do you accept guest posts on this press desk page?
No. This page is for press routing and verified materials, not for outside submissions.
How do I pitch a partnership for a joint investigation?
Email your proposal with the topic, proof you already have, the risk level, and what support you need from the network.
Where should legal teams send questions?
Email the press desk with the dossier link and the exact concern. Vague claims are harder to review.
How do you decide which topics become dossiers?
We choose topics where proof exists, public impact is real, and the record can be built without harming sources.
Can I request an interview with editors or analysts?
Yes. Use the briefing email and include the topic, audience, and the time window you can record or publish.
Do you offer a press kit for every outlet in the network?
This hub covers the broader organization. If you need a brand-specific pack, request it and name the outlet.
How should I cite the network in a story?
Use the outlet name you are referencing, then add the dossier title, year, and direct link.
Can I get brand assets for a broadcast graphic?
Yes. Use the licensing link and request the file set by email so you get the clean versions.
Press routing
If you only do one thing, do this
Email the press desk with your deadline and the dossier link, and you will get the fastest possible routing.