ARTICLE
368
Global Media and Communication [1742-7665(2009)5:3] Volume 5(3): 368–388
Copyright © 2009 SAGE Publications (Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC:
http://gmc.sagepub.com)/10.1177/1742766509346610
The revelations of investigative
journalism in France
■ Dominique Marchetti
Centre de sociologie européenne, National Center for Scientific Research, CNRS, and
University of Paris 1-Sorbonne, France
ABSTRACT
Since the 1970s and 1980s, national newspapers in France, both general and
political, have regularly praised ‘investigative journalism’ and its role in unveiling
‘scandals’. To gain an understanding of how this new model of professional
excellence arose, even though it concerns only a small number of journalists, we
need to show the extent to which it is first of all largely symptomatic of a series of
changes that have occurred outside the field of journalism, especially in the
political and legal worlds, and in the relationships these spaces maintain with one
another. In particular it is important to show that the media space has become
highly strategic, notwithstanding its relative lack of autonomy. What is covered by
the media is largely the outcome of power relations within different social spaces
that are then translated in accordance with media processes. Thus ‘investigative
journalism’ is often based less on journalists’ own investigations than on state-
sponsored studies: reports, inquests, etc. The present article endeavours to show
how and why these ‘scandals’ have been exposed only where such external
changes have also found an echo in the field of general and political media
nationally, in particular among a group of politicized journalists who constitute a
new specialist field within the profession. The rise of ‘investigative journalism’ and
its successful profile in the discourse of the profession both result from and reveal
transformations affecting the whole space of journalism.
KEY WORDS
commercial and professional competition ■ investigative journalism ■ journalistic
field ■ legal journalism ■ relations between media and sources ■ scandal
Since the 1980s, the general and political news media in France have
been praising the virtues of ‘investigative journalism’ and its role in
exposing scandals, so-called affaires.
1
Front-page stories announce revelations
about legal scandals, especially involving high-ranking politicians. Many
journalists seem to regard such investigations as clearly superior to other