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Saturday May 30, 2026 5:15pm - 6:30pm CEST
Investigating data-driven stories on environmental health, long-term pollution, or biodiversity loss often means facing a structural problem: the data don’t exist, or have never been systematically collected, not even by public institutions. In these cases, the only option is to produce them from scratch.

This session presents a journalism-led methodology that integrates citizen science and social research as core tools of investigative data journalism. Developed through collaboration with scientists while preserving editorial independence, the approach is grounded in concrete case studies and practical experience.

Drawing on projects conducted with communities exposed to chronic industrial pollution, environmental degradation, and conflict, the session shares practical tools, workflows, and lessons learned for designing, collecting, validating, and using original data when datasets are missing.

Participants will learn how to:
-design and run a citizen science project for investigative reporting, from framing research questions and defining indicators, to engaging and training citizen scientists, data collection, quality control, and journalistic use of the data- establish effective collaboration with scientists during research design, data collection, and verification through shared protocols and a memorandum of understanding
- design a rigorous social research process to investigate community needs and priorities using surveys, interviews, and qualitative methods, including collecting and analysing texts to identify trends, patterns, recurring themes, and undercovered issues
- integrate community-generated data, social research findings, and scientific measurements into original investigations and engaging stories.

The session also demonstrates how this approach can generate multiple, high-impact outputs: original investigative reporting based on co-produced data, policy briefs grounded in empirical evidence, and social research outputs in scientific journals.
Speakers
avatar for Giulia Bonelli

Giulia Bonelli

Co-founder, science journalist, FACTA
I’m a science journalist and co-founder of FACTA, an Italian independent media organization applying the scientific method to investigative journalism.
I mainly cover climate, environment, Earth observation and space exploration. My work at FACTA also focuses on the sustainability of independent journalism, engagement strategies and community-centred journalism approaches. I’m the author of the podcasts Foresight - Deep into the Fut... Read More →
avatar for Francesca Conti

Francesca Conti

Co-founder - manager, FACTA
With over 20 years of experience in science communication, I work on strategy, organisational development, fundraising and project design. My work focuses on strengthening independent science journalism and creating sustainable models for evidence-based information in the public interest... Read More →
avatar for Marco Boscolo

Marco Boscolo

Science journalist, FACTA
FACTA co-founder and partner. Science and data journalist with +20 years of experience. Contributes to Il BO Live, LeScienze (the Italian edition of Scientific American) and RSI, the National Swiss Radio in Italian. In 2020 he co-authored the book Semi ritrovati, and in 2024 he p... Read More →
Saturday May 30, 2026 5:15pm - 6:30pm CEST
3.05

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