Whistleblowing service
Journalists can call our Whistleblowing service if they feel under pressure to act in a way that is not in line with the Editors' Code of Practice
Any journalist concerned about editorial pressure can call IPSO’s Whistleblowing service on 0800 032 0243, or complete our online form.
Information about IPSO's whistleblowing service for journalists.
The Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service is provided for journalists who are working (either on a freelance or employed basis) for IPSO- regulated publishers. Journalists can use the service to raise concerns that they have been asked to act contrary to the Editors’ Code. The hotline is an anonymous and independent. It is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
By telephone on 0800 032 0243
Complete the external online reporting form
It can be used by any journalist who has been asked to act contrary to the Editors’ Code by, or on behalf of, a publication regulated by IPSO. This includes both freelance and employed journalists.
Contact the Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service if you have concerns about being asked to act contrary to the Editors’ Code. You can also contact the service if you have concerns about corruption, dishonesty, or unethical behaviour which you feel are related to the Editors’ Code of Practice, and you cannot raise in the normal way within the publisher’s own processes and procedures.
No. The role of the Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service is to provide you with a means to provide anonymous information in an entirely non-judgemental environment.
Calls to the Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service are answered by the highly trained and experienced call handling team. They will gather all relevant details and provide them to IPSO’s standards monitoring team within 24 hours. Reports via the website are forwarded directly to IPSO’s standards monitoring team.
No.
Yes. You do not have to give your name if you do not want to.
The Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service does not have the capability to trace or record calls or reports submitted via the website, and there is no 1471 facility or call line identifier. There is no means of identifying you unless you volunteer your details. The Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service is there to process what you know, not identify who you are.
Anonymous information can often be very useful in directing an investigation and once the issue is highlighted it may be quickly resolved. No anonymous report is ever acted upon without proper analysis being made by IPSO.
The Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service is there for you to report where you have been asked to act contrary to the Editors’ Code of Practice by, or on behalf of, a publication regulated by IPSO. It is also for you to report any form of unethical wrongdoing or illegal activity within your workplace which you may be aware of, and you believe may be related to the Editors’ Code of Practice.
Any actionable information which you may provide will be investigated by the designated senior member working for IPSO. Even they will not know who has provided the information they receive, unless you choose to provide your details. How will I find out what is happening?
As your information is anonymous there will be no further contact with you unless you opt to engage in the Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service’s two-way communication function.
The skill and expertise of the call-handling team identifies such calls. All information received will be subject to proper analysis and assessment so you should feel safe that a colleague cannot target you without substantial justification.
IPSO recognises that, although it may occur only rarely, it is possible that journalists could be asked to act contrary to the Editors’ Code of Practice by, or on behalf of, a publication regulated by IPSO. IPSO has established this service so that journalists can be confident in raising those concerns and supported to do so.
You cannot use the Journalists’ Whistleblowing Service to make a complaint about an article, please use IPSO’s complaints form.