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Inside the Guardian

Inside the Guardian goes behind the scenes to reveal how our journalists expose and uncover major news stories, how we produce our many different editions and products and how new technology is changing the way we work
  • composite for any word

    From Kremlin leak to sperm counts: our readers’ favourite stories of 2021

    Here are 20 articles that may have helped convince people to support the Guardian’s journalism
  • From groundbreaking investigations to insults from Donald Trump, just some of the 250 or so Inside the Guardian articles published since 2015.

    Inside the Guardian: six years of candour, courage, and craft

    We revisit favourite contributions as our series on life behind the news agenda comes to an end
  • West Ham United v Tottenham Hotspur - Premier League<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 24: 'No Room for Racism' is displayed on the digital screen during the Premier League match between West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur at London Stadium on October 24, 2021 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

    Reporting on racism: ‘There are days it feels we are getting somewhere’

    Three of the Guardian’s sports writers reflect on the role of journalism in bringing about change, on and off the pitch
  • hacker scam phishing attack during covid19 coronavirus pandemic cyber security concept<br>2BJP24C hacker scam phishing attack during covid19 coronavirus pandemic cyber security concept

    Helping readers on the consumer desk: ‘We’re canaries in the coalmine’

    Our consumer affairs editor reflects on a year spent wrestling with emerging Covid scams and Brexit logjams
  • Red Bull x Mangrove Truck At Notting Hill Carnival<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 26: Nella Rose attends Notting Hill Carnival 2019 on August 26, 2019 in London, England. (Photo by John Phillips/Getty Images for Redbull)

    Community reporting: ‘These stories are at the heart of modern Britain’

    As a young black writer, I feared being pigeonholed as a ‘race reporter’. Now I see my role as vital to the national narrative
  • Damian Carrington

    Optimism for Cop26: every bit of heating we prevent reduces suffering

    Damian Carrington
  • Fiona Harvey, environment correspondent

    Optimism for Cop26: we must win the climate battle – and we absolutely can

    Fiona Harvey, environment correspondent
  • ‘We need images that viscerally depict how the emergency is affecting lives around the world’: a woman calling for help as a wildfire approaches hoiuses in a Portuguese village, 2019.

    ‘We’re all climate journalists now’: how the weather took over everything

    From the business section to the food magazine, Guardian editors are becoming focused on one dominant story
  • Guardian and Observer Investigations

    How to expose corruption, vice and incompetence – by those who have

    Unmasking tax dodgers, sexual predators and corrupt officials… investigative journalism is lonely, daunting, unnerving work. But it can change the world. Here’s how it’s done - by the people who do it
  • Tony Ageh

    ‘Is that live?’ The pioneers who put the ‘new’ into news

    Our head of editorial innovation speaks to Tony Ageh, who performed a similar role 30 years ago when the internet was in its infancy and experimentation was everything
  • GERMANY-EUROPE-WEATHER-CLIMATE-FLOODS<br>Military personnel inspects the area on a boat across the Ahr river in Rech, Rhineland-Palatinate, western Germany, on July 21, 2021, after devastating floods hit the region. (Photo by Christof STACHE / AFP) (Photo by CHRISTOF STACHE/AFP via Getty Images)

    Reporting on the climate crisis: ‘For years it was seen as a far-off problem’

    Our correspondent talks to her predecessor about how global heating went from a ‘slow burn’ to the biggest story of all
  • A BBC Micro Computer in use in a home in the 1980s. At launch the Cambridge built machine made home computing affordable for the first time.

    The Guardian’s first Tech editor: ‘They gave me a demo and showed me things I couldn’t believe’

    Victor Keegan, the correspondent who went on to put the first Guardian content online, recalls the chance news item in 1981 that opened up the possibilities of home computing and kicked off the paper’s dedicated coverage of a social revolution
  • Sean Ingle

    Tokyo Olympics was a 16-day adrenaline rush but also a lesson in rights and wrongs

    Sean Ingle
    The athletes and their performances dazzled, but it is vital to look beneath the surface and ask questions others will not
  • Gorbachev and Putin: representing two eras of Soviet and Russian history.

    Jonathan Steele: ‘I came to Russia a political correspondent and left a crime reporter’

    The veteran journalist, who moved to Moscow in 1988, charted the collapse of a superpower. But, he tells his successor, the Gorbachev revolution has been poisoned
  • Two large tables filled with people on both sides in the corner of a room with panelling and built-in bookcases, with huge bundles of paper stuck on spikes in between every occupant

    The changing art of the subeditor: ‘You had to read the type upside down’

    A deputy news production editor at the Guardian speaks to colleagues about how cutting and correcting copy has evolved over decades
  • Reading the Guardian newspaper. Photo by Linda Nylind. 21/4/2021.

    Me and my Guardian: ‘Without the Guardian I would not be where I am today’

    Guardian supporters around the world tell us how they first discovered the paper and what it has meant to them since
  • A column of people, led by two women carrying Nazi flags, and others  a huge banner saying 'Dem Deutschen Menschen kann nur

    Nazis, fear and violence: when reporting from Berlin was dangerous

    Our Berlin correspondent salutes the man who did his job 100 years ago, when it was much more dangerous and unpredictable
  • A Palestinian child kneels behind a sheet of corrugated iron as they look at an armoured vehicle

    Reporting on Israel: ‘Thirty years on, we are still covering the same old enmities’

    The Guardian’s outgoing Jerusalem correspondent Oliver Holmes talks to predecessor Ian Black about how much – and how little – the job has changed over the years
  • Carry On Again Doctor (1969), with (from left) Joan Sims, Jim Dale, Hattie Jacques and Charles Hawtrey

    Boozy lunches and sober sandwiches: how the Guardian film critic’s job has changed

    Peter Bradshaw chats with his predecessor Derek Malcolm about routes into the profession, screenings and social media
  • Hella Pick, photographed in London in 2017

    ‘A woman, a refugee, and a Jew’: pioneering reporter Hella Pick on breaking down walls

    A former Guardian foreign correspondent tells a successor about defying prejudice and gaining global acclaim for her work
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