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Media Freedom. Damian TambiniЧитать онлайн книгу.

Media Freedom - Damian Tambini


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id="ulink_be5497ec-c1e9-5a6e-9356-b79741e06a29"> Why Protect Media Freedom?

      The First Amendment to the US Constitution protects ‘freedom of speech – or of the press’. Whilst this suggests that freedom of the press is distinct from freedom of speech, the development of the law since then has tended to deny the existence of an institutional press right in the US.39 Thus Onora O’Neill notes that media freedom cannot benefit from the argument from human autonomy because, unlike individuals, organizations cannot, strictly speaking, express themselves, having no self to express.40 But in some senses, media organizations are more important and deserving of specific privileges. According to Eric Barendt: ‘Free press clauses and other provisions guaranteeing media freedom should, therefore, be understood to confer on all communications media – a term not confined to the established press and broadcasting media – some constitutional rights and immunities which are not conferred on individuals under freedom of expression or speech clauses.’41

      It is worth noting that several established tenets of this normative theory of freedom of communication are controversial.47 Philosophers such as O’Neill, for example,48 have pointed out that liberty appears to be no guarantee of the emergence or acceptance of truth. Relativists in philosophy and Foucauldians stressing the role of power in determining the acceptance of truth challenge the Millian view of the free marketplace of ideas, and there are many instances in which – in scientific communities, for example – highly regulated speech is required for the emergence of truth. The same could be said of courts. This is a highly contested philosophical territory. Suffice it to say at this point that not only the extent to which liberty leads to truth but the nature of truth itself may need unpacking.

      So the crisis of media freedom is one of internal contradictions, compounded by threats to democracy. There is a need for a restatement of the basic role and function of media freedom, and a global settlement for democracies resolving doctrinal and constitutional differences, in particular between the US and the EU. In this context it is important to restate the normative principles of freedom of speech, as Timothy Garton Ash49 and others have done. But it is also important to tease out and engage with the genuine contradictions and unresolved conflicts in the theory and practice of media freedom.

      If a theory can find some way to resolve the deep contradictions, tensions and ambiguities that follow, then it will be easier to implement across a range of aspects of law and policy. Recent disputes over social media reveal profound disagreement about what the media are, and the extent to which they should be free. Because of the need for widely agreed democratic ‘rules of the game’ it is hugely important that law, policy and ethical media practices are based upon widely shared and understood ideas of media freedom. Liberal democracies cannot afford the narcissism of small differences between their approaches to media freedom and must resolve their contradictions. The following are the questions which are the most important to address and resolve.

      If media, as the subject of liberty, enjoy privileges, then it is necessary for someone to decide who or what is or is not media: whether, for example, media privileges extend to bloggers, influencers or algorithms. But whoever defines who or what benefits from media privilege gains censorship power. In some cases, related questions, such as whether an activity is ‘journalism’ or ‘news’, are relevant to decisions about whether media privilege can be awarded,54 but the same problem arises. At the risk of overstating what is a general tendency rather than an absolute rule, US law tends to


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