
Eoghan Macguire
Journalist and Editor at Bellingcat
Journalist. Editor @Bellingcat. Fellow @JSKStanford
Articles
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Jul 12, 2024 |
lloydslist.com | Yörük Işık |Bridget Diakun |Eoghan Macguire
Analysis A Russian-owned and flagged bulk carrier that has routinely berthed at occupied Crimea received UN approval to unload in the Houthi-controlled port of Saleef FREE TO READ Source: Yörük Işık This article is the result of a joint investigation by Lloyd’s List and Bellingcat. The Bellingcat version of this piece can be found here.
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Jun 5, 2024 |
jskfellows.stanford.edu | Eoghan Macguire
“Flowers are only flowers because they fall.”This line, spoken by a troubled Japanese aristocrat named Lady Mariko in the hit TV drama Shogun, has come to surmise my mixed feelings of recent weeks. As you can probably guess, this period also included watching Shogun on Hulu. Like many good dramas and pieces of fictional writing, Lady Mariko’s words can be interpreted in a number of ways.
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Feb 20, 2024 |
cnn.com | Eoghan Macguire
Follow us at @WorldSportCNN and like us on FacebookOver the course of her remarkable life, Althea Gibson was many things to many people – an accomplished jazz singer, a saxophone player, an actress and the first black woman to play on the professional golf circuit. For Billie Jean King and tennis fans around the globe, however, Gibson will always be best remembered as a towering figure of their sport. And not just because of her imposing stature.
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Nov 13, 2023 |
medium.com | Eoghan Macguire
Open source investigations have led to some major scoops, but not all important projects get the attention they deserve. A simple question has been on my mind since coming to Stanford as a John S. Knight Journalism Fellow: How can the ever increasing number of talented open source investigators, many of whom are not traditional or trained journalists, be helped to tell their stories? The power and potential of open source investigations has become abundantly clear over the past decade.
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Nov 13, 2023 |
jskfellows.stanford.edu | Eoghan Macguire
Open source investigations have led to some major scoops, but not all important projects get the attention they deserve. A simple question has been on my mind since coming to Stanford as a John S. Knight Journalism Fellow: How can the ever increasing number of talented open source investigators, many of whom are not traditional or trained journalists, be helped to tell their stories? The power and potential of open source investigations has become abundantly clear over the past decade.
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All good things must come to an end at some point so I wrote a final blog post for @JSKstanford.

As his JSK Fellowship ends, 2024 JSK Fellow @EoghanMacguire shares his journey of exploration, innovation, and personal growth during his time at @Stanford. Read his heartfelt reflection on the fleeting yet beautiful nature of his experience. #Journalism https://t.co/YLSip04SR1

RT @trbrtc: Blinken, in Moldova just now: “I can't tell you what weapons were used or how they were used.” Meanwhile, CNN, SkyNews and NYT…

RT @bellingcat: A tugboat that has not been seen since an oil spill that caused damages totalling a reported $23 million in waters off Trin…