1. World problems
  2. Erosion of journalistic immunity

Erosion of journalistic immunity

  • Denial of rights to journalists
  • Forced breach of journalistic confidence

Nature

Pressure to make journalists reveal their sources of information may take the form of arrest, trial and imprisonment or general intimidation. Recent examples of threats to journalistic immunity have occurred in USA court cases, with convictions against journalists for the publication of the Pentagon Papers. In countries where political censorship is heavy, journalists may be imprisoned and tortured for subversive activities. Information may concern crime, corruption or other injustices, or be akin to espionage; and the possibility that sources would be revealed would risk making it more difficult or even impossible to obtain this information. The public would therefore be deprived of knowledge about matters which might concern them directly or indirectly.

Claim

If democracy is an engine, a free press is the oil that makes it work. If journalists cannot protect their sources, those sources will dry up and with them the essential lubricant that makes the difference between an inert, formal structure and a mechanism that actually works. Legislation fails to recognize the importance of confidential journalistic sources to the health of the body politic.

Instead of upholding the citizens' right to know what government institutions are doing in their name, the courts are effectively terrorizing the journalists who make available that information into betraying the trust of those who have information on what government wishes to withhold from the public.

Counter-claim

Disclosure of journalistic sources is necessary when it is in the interests of justice or national security or for the prevention of disorder or crime.

Broader

Distrust
Yet to rate

Aggravates

Aggravated by

Official secrecy
Presentable

Reduces

Reduced by

Related

Strategy

Value

Denial
Yet to rate
Breach
Yet to rate
Forced
Yet to rate
Erosion
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #1: No PovertySustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(D) Detailed problems
Subject
  • Communication » Journalism
  • Government » Diplomacy
  • Societal problems » Deprivation
  • Societal problems » Maltreatment
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    May 20, 2022