



| University: | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
| Location: | Urbana, Illinois |
| Year Established: | 2000 |
| Summary | Brant Houston leads efforts nationally and internationally to find new forms and models for investigative and enterprise reporting. |
Brant Houston, the executive director of Investigative Reporters and Editors Inc. (IRE), was named to the chair in May 2007. He succeeds Bill Gaines, who held the post since it was established in 2000.
The department's long tradition of emphasis on professional journalism will serve as the underpinning for the Knight Chair in Journalism. The program's resources will be used to teach practical application of investigative techniques through courses, workshops and seminars. Training will encompass print media and broadcasting and will be extended outside the university to staffs of newspapers and broadcast stations in need of training. It will include services to the international press in countries where investigative techniques are now unknown...As a result of the teaching and research of the Knight Chair, Illinois will serve as a new resource for investigative reporters and editors nationally, as a training center for young journalists and as an intellectual center for the public on issues involving the news media in investigative journalism. (2000)
Brant Houston’s work on creating nonprofit investigative web-based journalism centers helps to ensure that there will be a free and aggressive press in communities and regions where accountability in news coverage is diminishing or disappearing. Internationally, he works to increase awareness of organizations such as the Committee to Protect Journalists that help journalists in danger. His training for students and professionals includes strong emphasis on the use of Freedom of Information Act requests.
Brant Houston's work with the CU-Citizen Access project in Champaign on poverty-related issues and his collaboration with the National Center for Supercomputing Applications allows development of potential models for investigative reporting and basic reporting in the new digital world that will include participatory mapping by citizens and more extensive use of mobile phones.