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    In the Digital Age, a Fight to Preserve the Right to Report

    by Joel Simon
    September 10, 2014
    Photo by David Melchor Diaz via Flickr CC.

    The following is a guest post. Read more about MediaShift guest posts here.

    With journalists around the world being killed, kidnapped, and murdered in record numbers why is the Committee to Protect Journalists launching a campaign targeting U.S. government policies?

    "Journalism today lives online, and the ability to post, share, and communicate across borders is what defines the current era. This ability also threatens powerful forces, including autocratic governments and militant groups that reject critical scrutiny."

    The answer is simple. Because we must fight to preserve a global system on which independent and critical journalism depends. Journalism today lives online, and the ability to post, share, and communicate across borders is what defines the current era. This ability also threatens powerful forces, including autocratic governments and militant groups that reject critical scrutiny. Many have lashed out at the media, and repression of journalists around the world has increased as a result.

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    Let’s be clear. Journalists in the U.S. face limited physical risks and, with the very notable exception of James Risen, few are confronting the prospect of jail. But the threat to independent reporting is real. And what happens in the U.S. has a tremendous impact on global standards.

    The Chilling Effect

    Photo courtesy of Johathan McIntosh of Flickr.

    Photo courtesy of Johathan McIntosh of Flickr.

    The Right to Report campaign focuses on three areas: the chilling effect of pervasive surveillance; the aggressive campaign to hunt down government leakers, which has ensnared reporters; and the existence of a civil liberties “dead zone” at the U.S border in which officials are free to search journalists’ laptops and other work material.

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    The impact of these policies has been well documented. See for example, the joint HRW-ACLU report on surveillance “With Liberty to Monitor All“. The report, based on extensive interviews and research, described how journalists are changing the way they report because they no longer believe their communication is safe from government snooping. On leak investigation, please see Leonard Downie Jr.’s comprehensive report for CPJ — “The Obama Administration and the Press” — in which he describes the insidious “insider threat” program and chronicles the unprecedented number of cases brought under the 1917 Espionage Act. New York Times chief Washington correspondent David Sanger told Downie, “This is the most closed, control freak administration I’ve ever covered.”

    This is a characterization that the White House rejects. “From the day he took office, the president committed his administration to work towards unprecedented openness in government,” a White House spokesman told Politico in response to the CPJ report. The administration also points to the revision of the Justice Department guidelines for media subpoenas and the creation of a high-level working group to review media subpoena policies.

    But the White House has not broadly engaged on an issue that has emerged as a serious challenge to President Obama’s legacy, one that the president can and should address. This is why it is so vitally important that journalists and all others who believe in a free press support the Right to Report campaign and sign the petition. We need journalists who don’t generally get involved in these sorts of things to step up. Don’t worry, you’ll be in good company. Renowned journalists, including CPJ board members Christiane Amanpour and Associated Press Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll, have already signed on.

    Support at home means support abroad

    righttoreportsimple4wologoBlog

    The petition will help us stand up for the rights of journalists in the U.S., but it will also help support our global advocacy. We want the U.S. to have an unblemished press freedom record so that it can more effectively advocate for the rights of journalists in countries such as Turkey, Russia, and China. In these places, repression is growing and the stakes are enormous. The U.S. needs to speak out effectively in support of press freedom and it can do so only if its own record is not consistently challenged.

    To meet the ideals of the digital age — when information can and should flow freely across borders — the U.S. needs to set the highest possible standards, consistent with the country’s First Amendment tradition. In recent years, the U.S. has fallen short. With your help and support, we will work to correct that record.

    A version of this post originally appeared on the CPJ.org site.

    Click here to for the Right to Report petition.

    Joel Simon is the executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. He has written widely on media issues, contributing to Slate, Columbia Journalism Review, The New York Review of Books, World Policy Journal, Asahi Shimbun, and The Times of India. He has led numerous international missions to advance press freedom. His book, The New Censorship: Inside the Global Battle for Media Freedom, is scheduled for release in fall 2014. Follow him on Twitter @Joelcpj. His public GPG encryption key can be found here.

    Tagged: committee to protect journalists cpj.org free speech journalism threats right to report

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