The report paper is expected to be an investigative report on a particular international monetary/financial issues which has relevance to the materials covered in class.
The results of [investigative] reporting do not come cheaply, but they are a bargain to society,” James T. Hamilton writes in his new book Democracy’s Detectives: The Economics of Investigative Journalism, out this month from Harvard University Press. Through his research, Hamilton, the Hearst Professor of Journalism at Stanford University, finds that while investigative journalism often comes at a high cost to news organizations, the benefits it provides to society are often even greater.