APPLICATIONS ARE CURRENTLY CLOSED
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
PHILIP GEDDES MEMORIAL PRIZES
The window for 2025 application submissions is now closed.
Many thanks to everybody for submitting your applications to the Geddes Journalism Prizes. The judges have reviewed the applications and have now invited a shortlist of students that they would like to interview. The judging committee was pleased to see so many high quality applications, enjoyed reading them, and wishes the very best in your future endeavours to all those who applied.
Student Journalism prizes worth £6,500
The Geddes Trust will award £6,500 of journalism prizes to University students in Hilary Term 2025. Applications are currently open.
The prizes are open to both undergraduate and postgraduate student members of the University.
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The Philip Geddes Prize is open to student members of the University who, by the end of Trinity Term, will have completed the second year of their degree course. It is worth £2,500.
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The Ronnie Payne Prize for Foreign Reporting should be undergraduates of the University in their second, third or fourth year who have already participated in student journalism and hope to make their career in journalism. It is worth £2,500.
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The Clive Taylor prize is awarded for sports journalism and is open to all current University graduates or undergraduates regardless of year of study. It is worth £2,000.
Candidates for the prizes are asked to submit the following in two documents:
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A minimum of three and a maximum of six pieces of journalistic work completed whilst at University, in electronic format (PDF or Word), with the web link to the article immediately above the headline and the text pasted into the document.
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Articles must be in English, published in a recognised publication or website and published under a single byline only (no joint bylined articles will be considered).
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Applicants must also submit an outline (maximum 500 words) of a specific journalistic project upon which they propose to spend the award, again in electronic format. They should also include a rudimentary budget and basic details of any journalistic internships they have undertaken or positions on student publications held.
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The applicant’s name, college, year and subject should be at the top of each page
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The two documents should have the following file name format: ‘Bloggs-Payne-20’, ‘Bloggs-Taylor-20’ etc
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It is absolutely fine to apply for one, two or even all three prizes with the same samples and the same project proposal. However, should applicants wish to submit more samples of work, this is permitted. If, for example, you were applying for both the Geddes and Payne prizes, applicants could submit a minimum of three articles and a maximum of 12 (six articles for each prize). Less is more, but it’s up to the applicant.]
Applications should be emailed to geddes@seh.ox.ac.uk by midday on Friday 16 February 2024. Absolutely no late applications will be considered. The subject line of your mail should be clearly marked with the name of the prize(s) for which you are applying.
The awards are made on the condition that the money must be used for a media project or for expenses needed to support an internship in the media. Applicants for the Ronnie Payne Prize are required to put forward a proposal for a journalistic project which will take them abroad, that project being funded or part-funded by the prize money. Successful candidates must agree to submit by Christmas a report or project which demonstrates the use to which the prize money was put.
The Trust is named after Philip Geddes, an alumnus of St Edmund Hall and a journalist of considerable promise. After graduating he joined the staff of the London Evening Standard, then moved to the staff of the Daily Express. In December 1983 he was in Harrods, the Knightsbridge store, when orders were issued for the building to be evacuated. Realising there was a story to be had, he went to investigate. He was killed by the blast from a bomb planted by the IRA. Philip was just 24.
Since 1984 the Philip Geddes Memorial Prize has encouraged promising student journalists. Former prize winners have been employed by the BBC, ITN, Reuters, the Economist, and a wide range of Fleet Street newspapers.
The Clive Taylor Prize for Sports Writing is in memory of the distinguished cricket writer Clive Taylor. Clive toured with every major MCC team in the 19 years before he died, aged 50, in 1977 and was the cricket correspondent of the Sun.
The Ronnie Payne Prize for Foreign Reporting was established by his widow, Celia Haddon, and honours the work of the acclaimed foreign correspondent and war reporter, Ronnie Payne, who became, over the course of a long and distinguished career, a much-respected expert on espionage and terrorism. He died, aged 87, in 2013.