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Explanatory journalism

Explanatory journalism or explanatory reporting is a form of reporting that attempts to present ongoing news stories in a more accessible manner by providing greater context than would be presented in traditional news sources.[1][2][3] The term is often associated with the explanatory news website Vox,[1][4][5] but explanatory reporting (previously explanatory journalism) has also been a Pulitzer Prize category since 1985.[6][7] Other examples include The Upshot by The New York Times, Bloomberg Quicktake, The Conversation, and FiveThirtyEight.[8]

Relation to analytic journalism[edit]

Journalism professor Michael Schudson says explanatory journalism and analytic journalism are the same, because both attempt to "explain a complicated event or process in a comprehensible narrative" and require "intelligence and a kind of pedagogical flair, linking the capacity to understand a complex situation with a knack for transmitting that understanding to a broad public."[9] Schudson says explanatory journalists "aid democracy."

Analytic journalism

Investigative journalism

Narrative journalism

Opinion journalism

Pundit

online course organized by the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas

How explanatory journalism informs and engages audiences

The Fix Media

Explanatory journalism: What it is and how to do it