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Full Description
This unprecedented book provides a comprehensive examination of the issue of protecting journalists in conflict situations from both a practical and humanitarian law perspective.
Violent criminals and corrupt governmental officials harass, co-opt, and kill local and foreign journalists in countries from Mexico to Afghanistan, to Russia and the Philippines. Staggeringly, there has been little or no prosecution in 89 percent of journalist murders worldwide. Such widespread impunity is arguably one of the greatest threats to press freedom. A number of international organizations and advocates have developed efforts to mitigate this problem, but belligerents continue to act with few restraints and little, if any, accountability.
War on Words: Who Should Protect Journalists? is an examination of the deteriorating and dangerous environment facing journalists and what stakeholders are doing to address this serious problem threatening democracy worldwide. The authors explore the peril facing journalists, delve into the legal and practical history of press protection, evaluate current safety strategies for journalists, and gather opinions from an array of local and international correspondents and practitioners on how to improve this untenable situation.
Contents
Foreword by Chris Cramer
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Risks and Rewards: Reporting from Armed and Non-Armed Conflict Situations
2. Measures of Civility: Legal Protections Developed for Journalists Reporting from Danger Zones
3. From "Name and Shame" to Media Literacy: Nonstate Strategies and Tactics to Protect Journalists
4. Don't Shoot the Messenger: Journalists Who Risk Everything to Tell Stories of Conflict
Addendum
5. Are We Doing Enough? What Stakeholders Suggest Should Be Done to Protect Journalists and Media Workers
Appendices
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index