Background and journalism
Born in Ireland, Cathcart attended school in Dublin and Belfast before taking a degree in history at Trinity College Dublin. After graduating in 1978, he joined Reuters news agency, first as a trainee and then as a correspondent. He was on the founding staff of '' The Independent'' in 1986, and of ''The Independent on Sunday'' in 1990, rising to become deputy editor of the latter paper. From 1997, Cathcart was a freelance journalist and author, writing about the murder of Stephen Lawrence, the scandal of trainee deaths at the British army’s Deepcut Barracks and the false conviction of Barry George for the murder of Jill Dando. In 2005–8, he was assistant editor and then media columnist at the '' New Statesman''. From 2002, he helped launch journalism teaching at Kingston University, finally becoming professor there in 2006.Hacked Off and press standards
From 2008 to 2010, Cathcart was specialist adviser to the House of Commons Select Committee on Culture, Media and Sport at a time when it was investigating press standards and the phone-hacking scandal. The Committee report was highly critical of News International (now News UK) and of the Press Complaints Commission (since abolished). From 2010, Cathcart blogged on the unfolding hacking affair, mostly forHistory writing
Cathcart has written on history, both as a journalist and an author. At ''The Independent on Sunday'' he wrote a weekly column on the subject called "Rear Window", and began publishing on the history of science. ''Test of Greatness'' (1994) was an account of the making of the British atomic bomb. ''Rain'' (2002) was about the science of rain. ''The Fly in the Cathedral'' (2004) was about the first successful artificial disintegration of the atomic nucleus ( the splitting of the atom) at Cambridge in the 1930s. Cathcart later wrote about the early history of journalism and communication, which is the subject of ''The News From Waterloo: The Race to Tell Britain of Wellington's Victory'' published in May 2015.Bibliography
*''Test of Greatness: Britain’s Struggle for the Atom Bomb'' (1994) *''Were You Still Up for Portillo?'' (1997) *''The Case of Stephen Lawrence'' (1999, winner of the Orwell Prize for political writing and the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction) *''Jill Dando: Her Life and Death'' (2001) *''Rain'' (2002) *''The Fly in the Cathedral: How a small group of Cambridge scientists won the race to split the atom'' (2004) *''Everybody’s Hacked Off: Why we don’t have the press we deserve and what to do about it'' (with Hugh Grant, 2012) *''The News from Waterloo: The race to tell Britain of Wellington’s victory'' (2015)Academic Accolades
*Crime Writers' AssociationReferences
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