Investigative Journalism
Garance Burke is an expert at the intersection of investigative journalism and artificial intelligence who leads high-impact projects on technology and society. She has helped create ethical standards surrounding the use of AI models and recently wrote an AI chapter for the AP Stylebook, offering journalists best practices for AI reporting. She was a Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence-John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University in 2020.
Burke’s reporting for The Associated Press has spurred significant real-world change. Her work was the subject of the first documentary film partnership with FRONTLINE PBS, which won a National News & Documentary Emmy Award. She also has been honored as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting and received accolades including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Awards for Domestic Print Reporting and the John Seigenthaler Prize for Courage in Journalism.
Based in San Francisco, she has dual master’s degrees in public policy/documentary film from the University of California, Berkeley and began her journalism career in Mexico City on staff at El Financiero and The Washington Post.
