British prize for political writing
For the NCTE George Orwell Award for Distinguished Contribution to Honesty and Clarity in Public Language, see
Orwell Award .
The Orwell Prize is a British prize for political writing. The Prize is awarded by The Orwell Foundation , an independent charity (Registered Charity No 1161563, formerly "The Orwell Prize") governed by a board of trustees.[ 1] Four prizes are awarded each year: one each for a fiction (established 2019) and non-fiction book on politics, one for journalism and one for "Exposing Britain's Social Evils" (established 2015); between 2009 and 2012, a fifth prize was awarded for blogging. In each case, the winner is the short-listed entry which comes closest to George Orwell 's own ambition to "make political writing into an art".[ 2]
In 2014, the Youth Orwell Prize was launched, targeted at school years 9 to 13 in order to "support and inspire a new generation of politically engaged young writers".[ 3] In 2015, The Orwell Prize for Exposing Britain's Social Evils, sponsored and supported by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation , was launched.[ 4]
The British political theorist Sir Bernard Crick founded The Orwell Prize in 1993, using money from the royalties of the hardback edition of his biography of Orwell. Its current sponsors are Orwell's son Richard Blair , The Political Quarterly , the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and the Orwell Estate's literary agents, A. M. Heath.[ 5] The Prize was formerly sponsored by the Media Standards Trust and Reuters.[ 6] Bernard Crick remained chair of the judges until 2006; since 2007, the media historian Jean Seaton has been the Director of the Prize. Judging panels for all four prizes are appointed annually.[ 7]
Winners and shortlists
The Orwell Prize for Political Fiction (2019–present)
The Orwell Prize for Political Writing (2019–present)
Combined book category (1994–2018)
Beginning with 2019, the Book prize was split into fiction and non-fiction categories.[ 31] [ 32]
The Orwell Prize for Journalism (1994–present )
The Orwell Prize for Exposing Britain's Social Evils (2015–present)
Year
Author
Title
Publisher
Result
Ref.
2015
Alison Holt
Care of the elderly and vulnerable
BBC
Winner
Randeep Ramesh
Casino, style Gambling as a Social Ill
Shortlist
Nick Mathiason
A Great British Housing Crisis
Mark Townsend
Serco: a hunt for the truth inside Yarl's Wood
George Arbuthnott
Slaves in peril on the sea
Aditya Chakrabortty
London Housing Crisis
2016
Nicci Gerrard
Words fail us: Dementia and the arts
Winner
[ 84]
Sally Gainsbury , Sarah Neville , and John Burn-Murdoch
The Austerity State
Financial Times
Shortlist
Jackie Long , Job Rabkin , and Lee Sorrell
Detention Undercover: Inside Yarl's Wood
Channel 4
Michael Buchanan
Investigation into NHS Failings
David Cohen , Matt Writtle , and Kiran Mensah
The Estate We're In
London Evening Standard
David Leigh , James Ball , Juliette Garside , and David Pegg
The HSBC Files
The Guardian
2017
Felicity Lawrence
The gangsters on England's doorstep
The Guardian
Winner
Billy Kenber
Drug profiteering exposed
The Times
Shortlist
Tom Warren , Jane Bradley , and Richard Holmes
The RBS Dash for Cash
BuzzFeed News
Ros Wynne-Jones
Real Britain
Daily Mirror
Mark Townsend
From Brighton the Battlefield
The Guardian
Anna Hall , Erica Gornal , and Louise Tickle
Behind Closed Doors
True Vision Aire and The Guardian
2018
Sarah O’Connor , John Burn-Murdoch , and Christopher Nunn
On the Edge
Financial Times
Winner
Andy Davies , Anja Popp , and Dai Bakera
Her Name Was Lindy
Channel 4 News
Shortlist
Joe Plomin
Behind Locked Doors
BBC Panorama
Patrick Strudwick
This Man Had His Leg Broken in Four Places Because He Is Gay
BuzzFeed UK
Mark Townsend
Four young black men die: were they killed by the police?
The Observer
Jennifer Williams
Spice
Manchester Evening News
2019
Max Daly
Behind County Lines
Vice
Winner
[ 9]
2020
Ian Birrell
Winner
[ 12]
2021
Annabel Deas
Hope High
BBC Radio 5 Live
Winner
[ 17]
Robert Wright
Behind Closed Doors: Modern Slavery in Kensington
The Financial Times
Shortlist
[ 78]
Sirin Kale
Lost to the Virus
The Guardian
Simon Akam
Britain and the Pandemic
1843
Tom Kelly , Susie Coen , and Sophie Borland
Exposing the Care Homes Catastrophe
Mail Investigation Team
Jane Bradley and Amanda Taub
Failings in Britain Leave Victims of Domestic Violence in Peril
The New York Times
Richard Watson
Hate Crime
BBC Newsnight
2022
Ed Thomas
The Cost of Covid - Burnley Crisis
BBC News
Winner
[ 85]
2023
Shanti Das
Migrant care workers
The Observer
Winner
[ 86]
Mark Townsend
Child asylum seekers
The Observer
Winner
[ 87]
The Orwell Prize for Reporting Homelessness (2023–present)
Blog category (2009–2012)
Special prizes
In addition to the four regular prizes, the judges may choose to award a special prize.
In 2007, BBC's Newsnight programme was given a special prize, the judges noting, "When we were discussing the many very fine pieces of journalism that were submitted Newsnight just spontaneously emerged in our deliberations as the most precious and authoritative home for proper reporting of important stories, beautifully and intelligently crafted by journalists of rare distinction."
In 2008, Clive James was given a special award.
In 2009, Tony Judt was given a lifetime achievement award.
In 2012, a posthumous award was made to Christopher Hitchens , his book Arguably having been longlisted that year.[ 42] [ 41]
In 2013, Marie Colvin received a special prize for On the Front Line. She had been killed earlier that year while on assignment in Homs, Syria .[ 45]
In 2014, the Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland was given a special award, after having been shortlisted for the Journalism Prize that year.
Controversy
In 2008 the winner in the Journalism category was Johann Hari . In July 2011 the Council of the Orwell Prize decided to revoke Hari's award and withdraw the prize. Public announcement was delayed as Hari was then under investigation by The Independent for professional misconduct.[ 96] In September 2011 Hari announced that he was returning his prize "as an act of contrition for the errors I made elsewhere, in my interviews", although he "stands by the articles that won the prize".[ 97] A few weeks later, the Council of the Orwell Prize confirmed that Hari had returned the plaque but not the £2,000 prize money, and issued a statement that one of the articles submitted for the prize, "How multiculturalism is betraying women" , published by The Independent in April 2007, "contained inaccuracies and conflated different parts of someone else's story (specifically, a report in Der Spiegel )".[ 98]
Hari did not initially return the prize money of £2,000.[ 99] He later offered to repay the money, but Political Quarterly , responsible for paying the prize money in 2008, instead invited Hari to make a donation to English PEN , of which George Orwell was a member. Hari arranged with English PEN to make a donation equal to the value of the prize, to be paid in installments once Hari returned to work at The Independent .[ 100] However, Hari did not return to work at The Independent .
References
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