Working-class representation in UK journalism has hit a record low. A report released in 2022 found a staggering 80% of journalists come from professional and upper-class backgrounds, and while race a...
Jane Bradley is an investigative correspondent covering the United Kingdom for The New York Times. She is based in London, where she focuses on uncovering abuses of power, financial crime and corruption, and social injustices. Jane has nearly 15 years experience in broadcast, print, and digital journalism. Prior to joining The New York Times in 2020, she worked for the BBC where she became one of its youngest senior broadcast journalists and worked on the flagship investigative program Panorama, before joining BuzzFeed UK's investigations team in 2015.
Jane was a Pulitzer Prize finalist and Investigative Reporters and Editors award winner in 2018 as part of the BuzzFeed team that investigated a string of mysterious Russia-linked deaths in Britain. She is a three-time Orwell Prize finalist for an investigation into how the British government failed victims of domestic abuse at the start of the Covid-19 lockdown; an exposé of the trafficking gangs recruiting Britain's homeless into slave labour; and an investigation into how the UK's biggest bank, RBS, systematically abused customers for profit.