Crime and Investigative Reporting in the UK

Today’s episode is an insightful discussion on the impact of crime reporting on society as Marianne Colbran shares her research on the changes in crime reporting over the past 40 years, including the impact of the Leveson Report and the ‘fake news’ era.

The panel also explores how working practices and lack of diversity in newsrooms have led to representational harm and the ‘othering’ of communities, and how nonprofits are working to reverse this.

About the Authors

Marianne Colbran

Dr Marianne Colbran

Marianne Colbran is a Visiting Fellow in Criminology at the LSE. Her books include, Media Representations of Police and Crime and Crime and Investigative Reporting in the UK, which will be published in June 2022. Marianne has also been a television script writer for thirteen years, including working as a staff writer on the British police show, ‘The Bill’.

moses mckenzie

Moses McKenzie

Moses McKenzie is of Jamaican heritage and grew up in Easton in Bristol, UK, where he still lives and writes full-time. An Olive Grove in Ends is an excerpt from his debut novel. The cast is drawn from a Jamaican-Somali community in Bristol. It focuses on the turbulent life of Sayon, a young drug dealer who dreams of starting a new life in prosperous Clifton. It’s a tale of religious faith and friendship, blood money and murder.

About the Speaker

bill thomas

Bill Thomas

Bill Thomas was the first Black male police officer in South Yorkshire. He’s retired now but last year after 40 years of public service, he returned to his station for Channel 4 to record and retrace the battles, the racism, and the friendships of a remarkable career.

About the Chair

Dawn Cameron

Dawn Cameron

Dawn Cameron is a programe coordinator who has worked on a range of projects in the arts, cultural and third sectors over many years. She is a regular chair of events. Dawn has a particular interest in working on projects which focus on socially engaged practice, issues of equality and social justice.