Features:
Things You Made, June 14
New journalism code projects, plus updates from OpenNews
SRCCON 2019 is Very Near
We’re so excited for each and every one of this year’s SRCCON sessions. If this session list makes you want to join us, our participation form is still open, and it’s waiting for you.
What You’ve Been Making
This week we’ve picked a handful of recent projects that help the average reader find their way through a maze—whether that’s an environmental issue, an immigration journey, or lawmakers’ policies.
Texas police can seize money and property with little transparency. So we got the data ourselves.
(Texas Tribune, June 7, 2019)
Findings from 560 forfeiture cases, which resulted in the seizure of nearly $10 million.
Welcome to Our User Guide to Local Government
(City Bureau, June 4, 2019)
Context and deep dives on local government in Chicago, putting info and power in the hands of readers.
How Can a Seal Track Climate Change?
(PRI, June 3, 2019)
What happens if we equip seals with sensors? Scroll to find out.
252 days: One mother’s desperate fight to bring her daughter home
(NJ.com, June 12, 2019)
One family’s quest for reunion, against a larger backdrop of immigration policies.
What else are you making? Tell us what’s happening. Email source@opennews.org.
Even More Things We Saw Recently
Using sprints to drive digital subscriptions, at the Sacramento Bee. How the New York Times helped its reporters learn to love spreadsheets, with tools that your team can use, too. What happens when your reporters write mission statements. Designing data visualizations with empathy, by Kim Bui, including thoughts from Lam Thuy Vo on finding surprising human connections within data.
Jobs + Things
- The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel is looking for a data journalist who’s an investigative reporter at heart.
- For a short-term gig, CALMatters seeks an interactives developer.
- Be part of NPR’s product team with this senior role focused on the org’s publishing platform.
- …and even more on Source Jobs.
P.S.—This Roundup Also Comes in Email Flavor
This roundup comes right to your inbox when you sign up for our biweekly Source projects newsletter.
Credits
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Lindsay Muscato
Editor of Source from 2015-2020