Abstract

Risks to journalists are rising with disasters, epidemics, physical, mental and digital harassment all increasing globally. Some 1382 journalists have been killed since 1992 and 246 are imprisoned. However, the threat type has been changing, with the majority of journalists killed annually being ones working in their own country, often who are targeted for assassination. In response, UNESCO and others have called for research into best practice for safety education to halt this and the consequential decline in global media freedom. This five-year award winning project, A Holistic Humanitarian Approach to Enhance the Safety and Resilience of Journalists Globally, tested the hypothesis that a new pedagogy based on a ‘holistic humanitarian’ philosophy would be more effective in protecting journalists working in dangerous domains globally than existing provisions. The little-changed 30-year-old dominant international provision, the ‘military battlefield’ pedagogy, is used by the world’s major news organizations like BBC, CNN and the New York Times. This new pedagogy adapted and customized best practice from other professions and used Taylor’s 2020 Competencies for Disaster Healthcare professionals. A new program was devised and the two international cohorts who took it in 2018 and 2019 judged that it ‘very significantly’ enhanced their resilience and safety skills. Its concentration on group and individual physical and mental resilience building, risk mitigation, psychology, communication, self-defence, and digital security skill acquisition was a paradigm shift in training internationally for news professionals in dangerous environments. The research, thus, proved the study’s hypotheses.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic and the harassment of journalists during the various protests in 2020 has brought into focus the requirement for effective safety education and enhancement of resilience for frontline news reporters

  • In this part of the introduction, we firstly review the literature relating to the global challenges in journalism education

  • This section details the methodology used for the project and qualitative and quantitative tools used to evaluate the utility of the new pedagogy by the participants

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic and the harassment of journalists during the various protests in 2020 has brought into focus the requirement for effective safety education and enhancement of resilience for frontline news reporters. Even before the pandemic the number of journalists being killed, injured, jailed, harassed, censored, experiencing systematic predatory attacks online, experiencing work-related stress, and otherwise being hindered from doing their work was increasing long-term globally outside of war zones [1]. In terms of digital predatory behaviour towards journalists, Reporters Sans Frontier, has pointed to the use of social media by states such as India, Brazil, and Russia to insult and threaten reporters.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call