Organisation related to peace, democracy or social justice.
In 2024, The Museum of Political Corruption bestowed the Nellie Bly Award for Investigative Reporting [1] to ProPublica. [2] [3]
This award is bestowed by the Museum of Political Corruption for distinguished reporting on corruption.
“ProPublica’s courageous reporting on the Supreme Court was a seismic wake-up call for the public.
It forced a long overdue reckoning on the Court regarding its ethical standards,” said museum founder and president Bruce Roter.
The Museum of Political Corruption, a 501 (C)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan institution,
is dedicated to educating and empowering the public by providing a better understanding of political corruption,
and encouraging solutions that promote ethics reform and honest governance.
Corruption is a cancer that eats away at the very heart of democracy and undermines social justice.
The continued failure of most countries to significantly control corruption
is contributing to democratic regression around the world.
The Museum of Political Corruption is an online museum that was originally planned to be in a physical space in Albany, New York.
The online museum focuses on political corruption.