The IJB combines lessons learned over nearly a decade moving dozens of public interest stories from classrooms to media front pages and broadcast outlets through the National Student Investigative Reporting Network, which Rob Cribb began building in 2010. The model has since produced impactful student investigations into nursing home deficiencies, end-of-life care, environmental threats, medical malpractice, jury system inequalities, youth mental health, two-tiered healthcare, oil industry impacts on public health and lead-tainted drinking water across Canada.
Bodies for Rent
First Nations Infrastructure
Patient Files
Heliograph
Hate Crimes
Lead in Drinking Water
The Influencers
Invisible Threat
Choosing Death
Generation Distress
Mind Games
Privileged and Confidential
Illegal Health Products
Suspended
Toxic Supply
Latest Stories
- This Canadian cancer charity tells the public it spends most of its donations on charitable works. Financial records tell a different story
- Investigating Indigenous Issues panel: A non-profit journalism case study
- Rotting foundations. Rampant mould. Sewage backups. What an expert’s report reveals about the state of housing in ‘deliberately underfunded’ First Nations
- Is investigative journalism dying in Canada? A critical panel discussion
- Feds vow to probe findings of IJB/Star/TVO investigation on mental health care for Indigenous people