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Application Deadline: 14 July 2024.
Applications are now open for the 2024 African Fact-Checking Awards. The African Fact-Checking Awards, the longest-running awards programme honouring fact-checking journalism by the media in Africa, are in their eleventh year.
Requirements
- Entries for the 2024 awards are now open to journalists, journalism students, and professional fact-checkers – across the continent.
- To qualify, entries must have been first published or broadcast in the period from 1 July 2023 to 14 July 2024. The fact-check should conclude that a claim about an important topic, originating in or relevant to Africa, is either misleading or wrong.
To be eligible, entries for this competition must:
- Be the original work of the individual or team identified in the entry form as the author.
- Expose a claim on an important topic that originated in or is relevant to Africa as misleading or wrong.
- Be an original piece of fact-checking journalism first published or broadcast on any date from 1 July 2023 to 14 July 2024.
- Be received by the organisers before midnight GMT on 14 July 2023. Late entries will not be accepted.
- Be received by the organisers via the official entry form. No other means of sending in entries is allowed.
- Fact-checks can be published/broadcast in any language, but entry forms must be completed in either English or French. However, should the fact-checking report not be in English or French, a written translation must be submitted with the entry.
- By submitting an entry, the entrant confirms that they are the authors of the work, and that in the case of any dispute about this, this is entirely the entrant’s responsibility
- Reports published by Africa Check are not eligible for the competition.
- Judges reserve the right to move an entry from one category to another.
- Candidates can only enter for the awards in one category per year, but can submit more than one report if they choose.
- Should the entrant win a prize in the awards, we will send the money to a bank account to be nominated by them.
- At the shortlisting stage a representative of the jury may seek clarification on some points.
- Entrants who are found to be unethical about any aspect related to their entry will be disqualified.
- Entrants must agree to do media interviews and/or reports about the awards if they win.
- Entrants for the awards must agree to accept the judges’ decision as final.
Categories
The awards have three categories, with honours going to a winner and a runner-up. The categories are:
- Fact-Check of the Year by a Working Journalist
- Fact-Check of the Year by a Professional Fact-Checker
- Fact-Check of the Year by a Student Journalist
Prize:
- The winners of the working journalist and professional fact-checker categories will each get a prize of US$3,000.
- The runners-up will receive $1,500. The winner of the student journalist category will be awarded $2,000, and the runner-up $1,000.
For More Information:
Visit the Official Webpage of the African Fact-Checking Awards