[FoME] New MeCoDEM Working Paper | Journalistic Ethics and Practices in Conflict Societies

Ines Drefs Ines.Drefs at gmx.de
Mo Jun 29 15:36:21 CEST 2015


MECODEM WORKING PAPER:
REVIEW: JOURNALISTIC ETHICS AND PRACTICES IN CONFLICT SOCIETIES (Irene Neverla, Judith Lohner, and Sandra Banjac)

This working paper from the MeCoDEM series is now available for download at: http://www.mecodem.eu/publications/working-papers [1]

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This paper provides a critical review of literature on journalism in conflict societies ('conflict journalism'), by investigating principal theories, concepts and arguments, as well as empirical research findings concerning journalism and its role in democratisation processes and conflicts. Against the background of MeCoDEM Work Package 4 ("Journalistic ethics and practices"), the paper focusses on journalistic actors and their journalistic work practices, role perceptions and ethical orientations. The following overall observations can be summarized from the literature review:

     * Journalism can be defined as a social institution with the function to observe society and its various fields, selecting and providing topics for debate and decision-making by the wider public. Certain interrelated constituents inform journalistic performance and journalism culture: work practices, role perceptions, ethical orientations and structural conditions.

     * Existing (comparative) research shows that journalistic practices, roles, ethical orientations and structural conditions are neither static nor globally uniform. Rather, the cultural, political and historical and economic contexts relevant to specific regions and countries have significant impact on journalists' ethical orientations, role perceptions and work practices. Therefore journalism should be understood as one component in relation to many other societal components, as a relevant institution with a particular identity, logic of practices and ethics, but still embedded, dependent and limited within the societal context.

     * Despite the rich findings in the research field on journalism, there is a lack of conceptualization and empirical investigations concerning the specific role of journalism and journalistic actors in democratisation conflicts. So far there is no elaborated theory on journalism in the context of conflict societies and transitional democracies. Only few empirical studies have focused on journalistic ethics and practices in democratisation processes and transitional countries.

     * Due to a Western bias in journalism studies some areas of the world and non-western democracies remain either ignored or occupy a marginal position in comparative studies, and normative assumptions rooted in Western traditions remain largely unquestioned. What is needed therefore is a "dialogic" or "global approach" to journalism studies that would develop non-Western-biased concepts of journalism that extend beyond Western-grown models, incorporating valuable ideas and norms from both Western and non-Western traditions.

ABOUT MECODEM:
MeCoDEM began on 1 February 2014 and will run over three years. The project investigates the interplay of communication and democratisation conflicts in four emerging democracies, Egypt, Kenya, Serbia and South Africa, each of them representing unique aspects of transitional / post-transitional divisions. Based on a comparative case study design, the research covers constitutional conflicts, civic conflicts and conflicts surrounding accountability and good governance. These conflicts constitute arenas of dispute where the media interact with the communicative strategies of governments on the one hand, and political activists and political movements struggling for recognition on the other. MeCoDEM is funded by the European Union within the EU's Seventh Framework Programme. With a budget of 2.2 million Euros, the project consortium includes eight partner institutions from six countries: University of Leeds (co-ordinating institution), University of Belgrade, University of Hamburg, University of Cape Town, University of Oxford, Stockholm University, Ruhr University Bochum and American University in Cairo.

FOR FURTHER ENQUIRY:
Prof Irene Neverla | Irene.Neverla at uni-hamburg.de

MECODEM CONTACT:
Prof Barbara Thomass | Barbara.Thomass at rub.de
Website: www.mecodem.eu [2] | Twitter: @MeCoDEM [3]
 
Links:
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[1] http://www.mecodem.eu/publications/working-papers
[2] http://www.mecodem.eu
[3] https://twitter.com/MeCoDEM



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