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Handbook on Integrationfor policy-makers and practitioners
Directorate-GeneralJustice, Freedom and Security
European Commission
Third edition
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Handbook on Integration
for policy-makers and practitioners
Third edition, April 2010
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This Handbook was written by Jan Niessen and Thomas Huddleston o MPG on behal o the
European Commission (Directorate General or Justice, Freedom and Security)
It can be downloaded rom the European Commission's website at http://europa.eu/comm/
justice_home/ and rom the European Web Site on Integration at www.integration.eu
ISBN 978-92-79-13511-8
doi:10.2758/15387
European Communities, 2009
Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged.
Design: Ruben Timman/nowords.nl
Photography : MM Productions/Corbis
Printed in France
Printedonwhitechlorine-freePaPer
Europe Direct is a service to help you find answers
to your questions about the European Union
Freephone number (*):
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Contents
Preace 6
Introduction 8
n Chapter 1: European exchange o inormation and good practice 13
1.1 Targeted European cooperation on integration 15
1.2 The Handbook in ocus 21
n Chapter 2: Mass media and integration 25
2.1 Challenges and opportunities in the media environment 26
2.2 Developing an eective media strategy 31
2.3 Creating a more diverse media 37
Conclusions 46
n Chapter 3: Awareness-raising and migrant empowerment 49
3.1 Awareness-raising : inorming opinion and activating the public 51
3.2 Building capacity and choosing action 66
Conclusions 73
n Chapter 4: Dialogue Platorms 77
4.1 Setting up and running a platorm : overcoming obstacles 80
4.2 Roles or a leading public authority or civil society organisation 94
Conclusions 99
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n Chapter 5: Acquisition o nationality and the practice o active citizenship 101
5.1 Concepts and multiple interests in the shared uture o a diverse society 103
5.2 The acquisition o nationality 108
5.3 Administrative procedures encouraging citizens-to-be 113
5.4 From acquisition to active citizenship among old and new citizens 120
Conclusions 125
n Chapter 6: Immigrant Youth, Education and the Labour Market 129
6.1 Improving the school system 130
6.2 Investing in pupils 140
6.3 Facilitating the transition to higher education and the labour market 147
Conclusions 156
Annex I : Common basic principles or immigrant
integration policy in the European Union 159
Annex II : Integration benchmarking tool 161
Annex III : National Contact Points on Integration 165
Annex IV : Selected Bibliography 171
Legend :
The Handbook has been structured or ease o reerence with the use o boxes and the
ollowing symbols :
* = Conclusion highlighting lessons learned$ = Examples o good practiceZ = A website link to urther inormation. Weblinks have been provided whereverpossible. Please note these links were live at time o drating but are subject to change.
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6 Handbook on Integration
Preace
Seven years ago, at the European Council in Thessaloniki, the Heads o State and
Government called or more discussion on integration between Member States with a
view to learning rom one another. The European Commission, in cooperation with the
National Contact Points on Integration, experts who meet together regularly, decided to
draw up a handbook o good practice.
Today, we present this third edition o the handbook. It covers subjects o great
importance : the mass media and integration, awareness-raising and migrant
empowerment, dialogue platorms, acquisition o nationality and practice o active
citizenship, immigrant youth, education and the labour market. Almost 600 experts,
rom Governments and representing civil society, worked or over 18 months to exchange
ideas on these crucial topics. The result is the vast range o inspiring, concrete examples
contained in this edition o the handbook. But this handbook is not the only ruit o the
experts work. Seven years, three editions, ourteen technical seminars, the involvement
o several hundred people : all this created a connected, well-unctioning community o
practitioners.
Challenges in this area persist, but the handbook takes us a step urther in nding common
solutions to meet them. In previous editions we dealt with introduction programmes,civic participation, indicators, mainstreaming, urban housing, economic integration and
integration governance. With this third edition, almost all areas o relevance identied
by the Common Basic Principles agreed by Member States back in 2004 have been
covered.
This integration community is growing. A orum accessible to all was opened last year
the European Website on Integration. Hundreds o good practices have been added to
keep inspiring us, oten leading to new, excellent ideas and projects. Some o these are
unded by the European Fund or Integration.
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Handbook on Integration 7
With this third edition and the launch o the website, we complete the rst stage o the
2005 Common Agenda or Integration. The Treaty o Lisbon encourages us to establish
measures providing incentives and support or the action o Member States to promoteintegration. With the impetus provided by the Stockholm Programme, Ministerial
Conerences on Integration and debates o the European Integration Forum, we now
enter a dynamic period o work towards a common goal the well-being o all citizens
in a diverse society. The European Commission remains ully committed to this process.
Jonathan Faull
Director General
DG Justice, Freedom and Security
European Commission
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8 Handbook on Integration
Introduction
The Handbook on Integration contains lessons learned and good practices drawn
rom the experience o policy-makers and practitioners across Europe. By collecting
and presenting concrete examples rom dierent areas o immigrant integration, the
Handbook eeds into a larger policy process in the eld o integration in the European
Union (EU), notably the development o the European ramework on integration.
As with previous versions o the Handbook, the third version covers a mixture o
substantive and methodological topics. It covers three thematic subjects and three
governance approaches. Chapters on the role o the media, the acquisition o nationality
and the practice o active citizenship, and the experiences o immigrant youth in the
education system and labour market present practices and lessons learned in these
specic areas. Chapters on European exchange o inormation and good practice,
awareness-raising and empowerment, and dialogue platorms examine the structures
and mechanisms used or implementing successul integration strategies across all policy
elds. The third edition is based on a series o technical seminars hosted by the ministries
responsible or integration in Vienna (November 2007), Paris (November 2007), Athens
(March 2008), Dublin (May 2008), Lisbon (November 2008) and Tallinn (February
2009).
A thriving Europe aims to secure the long-term well-being o all the residents o its
diverse societies. Dierent groups o immigrants will continue to arrive and settle in
European societies that are themselves in transormation under the infuence o socio-
economic and demographic changes.
Integration policies aim to bring about, over time, a convergence o societal outcomes
or all. This requires the active involvement o all citizens and residents ; those with and
without an immigrant background. They can contribute to the social, economic, cultural
and civic lie o society by using their skills and competencies.
Individuals develop a capacity or lielong learning and are empowered as agents o
change or integrating societies. Comparable rights and responsibilities make participation
possible, as does the opening up o mainstream institutions.
Residents with a migration background may encounter diculties related to their origins,
settlement conditions or discrimination. Residents without a migration background may
encounter diculties in living with their new ellow residents, adjusting to the increased
diversity around them and negotiating new concepts o citizenship and participation.
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Handbook on Integration 9
New arrangements o active citizenship are negotiated by removing obstacles and by
building on acilitators o societal integration. Public authorities, civil society and the private
sector help themselves and the integration process by becoming learning organisations.They acquire intercultural knowledge and are proactive in addressing the changing needs,
social dynamics and well-being o their increasingly diverse population.
Chapter One diers rom the other chapters as it presents how the exchange o inormation
and good practice currently works through the targeted European cooperation on
integration. The ew practice examples concern EU-level activities, instead o national
practices. The chapter reers to the setting o legal standards and reporting on their
implementation. It also reers to the setting o policy priorities at European level and
briefy describes major elements o the Common Agenda or Integration such as the
European Website on Integration and the European Integration Forum. In particular, itdescribes the Handbook exercise, including the three series o technical seminars, which
led to three handbook editions or policy-makers and practitioners.
Chapter Twos thematic ocus is the role o the mass media in immigrant integration.
In liberal democracies that guarantee the reedom o the press, the medias role is to
provide inormation, education, and entertainment. The media unctions as a platorm
or open and honest communication about the positive and negative sides o social
realities, including migration. It possesses powerul instruments or infuencing attitudes
in society and providing inormation or everyone in society, including immigrants. Media
organisations are learning to capture the needs o an increasingly diverse audience,remove obstacles and open opportunities in their proession and organisations or
people with an immigrant background. Media proessionals, governments, politicians,
the public, organised civil society and private companies all have a role to play. This
chapter outlines strategies or developing the competencies o integration stakeholders
in the world o the media.
Chapter Three links together public awareness-raising and migrant empowerment as two
complementary approaches. Both contribute to the idea that societal integration works
as a two-way process o mutual accommodation between immigrants and the general
public. Through awareness-raising, policy-makers and practitioners increase the general
publics knowledge on integration issues and sensitivity to the well-being o all their
ellow residents. Awareness contributes to empowerment, as specic groups concerned
develop more inormed opinions on diversity and are empowered to more actively
participate in changing opinions. Empowerment helps immigrants help themselves. It
builds on immigrants knowledge o their own needs and increases their resources and
capacities in those areas. This enables immigrants and immigrant organisations to make
more inormed choices and commit to take greater action to change the integration
situation. Empowerment contributes to awareness as projects begin to recognise and
build on immigrants unique skills as awareness-raisers. These two concepts bring about
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10 Handbook on Integration
requent interaction among all residents as volunteers, through access to mainstream
institutions and new organisation partnerships, and as citizens, through participation in
integration policy-making and new orms o local and civic citizenship.Chapter Four presents dialogue platorms as one tool or negotiating integration. They
promote long-term mutual understanding and trust and can prevent and solve conficts
among and between immigrants, residents, citizens o immigrant and non-immigrant
background, and between these diverse groups and the government. It outlines each
step in the process o setting up and running ad-hoc and more permanent dialogue
platorms. It considers what practical obstacles practitioners oten need to overcome
and what acilitator roles can be built in or a leading public authority or civil society
organisation. A successul platorm gets an open and respectul exchange o views going
and, when done well, helps participants recognise common ground or cooperation toaddress the needs o their community. Picking up where the dialogue platorm leaves
o, ollow-up activities can have the eect o creating new networks between people
and organisations on the ground, giving them a shared sense o identity and interest in
the well-being o their neighbours.
Chapter Five examines the acquisition o nationality rom a citizen-centred approach to
integration. Immigrants who see their uture in a country have an interest in living there
with equal rights, responsibilities and opportunities to participate. EU Member States
becoming countries o immigration have an interest in ull socio-economic and political
inclusion by raising the naturalisation rate o settled rst generation residents and bysecuring the acquisition o nationality or their children born in the country. Certain
obstacles in conventional nationality law that are ound to unintentionally exclude
or discourage todays applicants are recognised and removed. The elements o the
administrative procedure that are most likely to delay or upset the process are reduced.
This leads to greater eciency in implementation and greater service satisaction among
citizens-to-be. One component in the acilitation o procedures that has received higher
priority in several Member States is raising participation and interest among the general
public. Ater the acquisition o nationality, encouraging active citizenship among new
and old citizens allows them to shape the shared uture o a diverse society. Activecitizenship links the multiple identities o its members together and enables them to ully
contribute to the economic, social, cultural, civic and political lie o the country.
Chapter Six goes through the various strategies to raise the educational attainment
and labour market outcomes o immigrant youth. Practitioners learn how biases in
the school system or individual socio-economic actors and language knowledge
can have a signicant impact on the opportunities and challenges that those with a
migration background ace at each stage o their education, rom inancy to young
adulthood. Measures can build the capacities o young immigrants themselves and that
o mainstream institutions responsible or meeting the learning needs o all students,
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Handbook on Integration 11
immigrant and native alike. Combined with robust intercultural education, this approach
osters new and greater orms o participation in increasingly diverse schools and their
communities. Enhancing the quality and eectiveness o education and training andmaking them accessible to immigrants creates more and better career opportunities,
which enhance a countrys economic competitiveness and social cohesion.
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Handbook on Integration 13
Chapter 1European exchange
of information and good practice
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14 Handbook on Integration
European exchange of information and good prac tice
Immigration and integration has grown rom an issue o interest to a ew specialised
stakeholders to one at the top o the agenda o many more and dierent types o
organisations. National and sub-national policies in many areas o integration areincreasingly inuenced by decisions taken at the EU level. The making o EU policies
can be a lengthy and complicated exercise, with dierent levels o involvement o
national governments, civil society and EU institutions. The European Commission
plays a pivotal role, oten as initiator and as coordinator. To understand their own
situation, policy-makers and practitioners at the local, regional and national level
must know how policies are shaped at European level and be able to take part in
European cooperation mechanisms.
The rst part o this chapter briefy presents how targeted European cooperation on
integration currently works. Standards in European Community law are set in areas that
greatly impact on the integration o immigrants. Legal cooperation on integration is
developing along with new political commitments and technical cooperation. Within
a ramework coordinated by the European Commission, a structured exchange o
inormation between the National Contact Points on Integration and the Commission
eeds into the meetings o the ministers responsible or integration. Their conclusions
set the priorities or new areas o European cooperation to be implemented and unded
through projects o a diverse set o stakeholders and local, regional and national
authorities across Europe.
It is beyond the scope o this chapter to go into the broader context o mainstreaming
integration at EU level, which was addressed in the European Commissions 2005
Communication on the Common Agenda or Integration. For instance, other areas o
European cooperation have taken up the integration o various categories o immigrants,
including reugees, in terms o culture, education, employment, entrepreneurship,
equal opportunities, health, multilingualism, public opinion, research, social inclusion
and urban policy. In addition, the work o two EU independent agencies is relevant
to immigrant integration : the EUs Agency or Fundamental Rights (FRA), based in
Vienna and built on the ormer European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia
(EUMC), and the European Foundation or the Improvement o Living and Working
Conditions (EUROFOUND), based in Dublin.
The second part o this chapter describes the three series o technical seminars that
produced the three editions o the European Handbook on Integration or policy-makers
and practitioners. By collecting and presenting concrete examples rom dierent areas
o immigrant integration, the handbook eeds into the larger process o the development
o the European ramework on integration.
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Handbook on Integration 15
Z
Z
Z
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1.1 Targeted European cooperation on integration
Over the past decade, the national governments o EU Member States have madecommitments to increase the EU institutions competence and work programmes on the
integration o legally-resident third-country nationals.
Standard-setting
The EUs legal competence in the areas o reedom, security and justice was increased
under the 1997 Treaty o Amsterdam. When it came into orce in 1999, the Member
States agreed, under the Tampere European Council Conclusions, that the aim o more
vigorous integration policies would be to ensure the air treatment o immigrants romoutside the EU who are legally living in an EU country. States would guarantee or these
third-country nationals rights and responsibilities that are as near as possible to those o
EU citizens. They would urthermore be oered the opportunity to obtain the countrys
nationality.
Community legislation has been enacted that produced European standards in certain
areas impacting on integration.
Two pieces o legislation have been adopted which impact on the integration oimmigrants, namely :
Directive 2003/86/EC o 22 September 2003 on the right to amily reunication
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32003L0086:EN:NOT
Directive 2003/109/EC o 25 November 2003 concerning the status o third-countrynationals who are long-term residents
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri= CELEX:32003L0109:en:NOT
On behal o the European Commission, the Odysseus Network o Academic Expertsundertook studies on the implementation o these Directives. The reports are madepublic at :
www.ulb.ac.be/assoc/odysseus/index2.html
Furthermore, two pieces o anti-discrimination law have been adopted, namely :
Directive 2000/43/EC o 29 June 2000 (the Racial Equality Directive)http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32000L0043:en:HTML
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32003L0086:EN:NOThttp://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32003L0109:en:NOThttp://www.ulb.ac.be/assoc/odysseus/index2.htmlhttp://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32000L0043:en:HTMLhttp://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32000L0043:en:HTMLhttp://www.ulb.ac.be/assoc/odysseus/index2.htmlhttp://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32003L0109:en:NOThttp://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32003L0086:EN:NOT8/14/2019 Handbook on Integration for policy-makers and practitioners
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European exchange of information and good prac tice
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Directive 2000/78/EC o 27 November 2000 (the Employment Equality Directive)
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32000L0078:EN:HTML
The European Commissions Network o Independent Legal Experts in theAnti-discrimination eld provides advice and assistance to the Commission andthe Member States on the transposition and implementation o these two legalinstruments.
http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=615&langId=en
Priority-setting
Political commitments have also been set by national governments, who use European
cooperation to agree on common priorities or action. The Member States adopted,
under the 2004 Council conclusions, the Common Basic Principles or Immigrant
Integration Policy. They are reproduced in Annex 1.
The Common Basic Principles aim to :
Assist Member States in ormulating integration policies by oering them a simple,
non-binding guide, with which they can judge and assess their own eorts ;
Serve as a basis or Member States to explore how EU, national, regional, and local
authorities can interact in the development and implementation o integration
policies ;
Assist the Council to refect upon and, over time, agree on EU-level mechanisms and
policies needed to support national and local-level integration policy eorts.
New political commitments and priorities or European cooperation are made at every
European conerence o the ministers responsible or integration. Three have been held
in Groningen (2004), Potsdam (2007), and Vichy (2008), with the next to take place
under the Spanish Presidency in 2010.
Technical cooperation
Technical cooperation on integration was established under the Hague Programme,
the ve-year work programme agreed by the EU Member States or closer cooperation
to strengthen the development o a common area o reedom, security and justice. New
impetus will be given to this area in the Stockholm Programme or 2010 to 2014.
The Commissions 2005 Communication, A Common Agenda or Integration providedthe Commissions rst response to establish a coherent European ramework. The
provision o EU cooperation mechanisms or stakeholders to share experience and
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32000L0078:EN:HTMLhttp://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=615&langId=enhttp://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=615&langId=enhttp://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32000L0078:EN:HTML8/14/2019 Handbook on Integration for policy-makers and practitioners
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Handbook on Integration 17
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inormation across countries would encourage Member States to put the Common Basic
Principles into practice and strengthen their integration eorts. The mechanisms listed
in this section are the cornerstones o this ramework.In 2002, the National Contact Points on Integration (NCPIs) were brought together
as an EU-level intergovernmental network or the exchange o inormation among
representatives o the national ministries responsible or integration and the European
Commission. The network works to operationalise and enhance the implementation
o technical cooperation, dene common objectives, set targets or benchmarks, and
strengthen coordination between national and EU policies.
The Commission structured the exchange o inormation and produced several
comparative publications on integration policies and practices across the EU. Its three
Annual Reports on Migration and Integration in Europe contained inormation largely
provided by the NCPIs on immigration policies and statistics and on the implementation
o the Common Basic Principles on integration. The Handbooks on Integration or
policy-makers and practitioners were the main drivers o the exchange o inormation
and practices acilitated by the NCPIs.
The European Website on Integration takes this structured exchange o inormation
to a higher level. The website is or all stakeholders and provides a public gateway
or sharing inormation and practices rom across all Member States and covers all
dimensions o integration. It aims to oster integration policies and practices by sharingsuccessul strategies and supporting cooperation among governments and civil society
organisations across the EU. It is open to everyone and enables visitors to share good
practices, to discover unding opportunities and look or project partners, to stay
updated on the latest developments at EU, national and local level, and to stay in
touch with members o the EU integration community. By acting as a bridge between
integration practitioners and policy-makers, the European Web Site on Integration is
providing Integration at your ngertips with high-quality content rom across Europe,
and ostering the community o integration practitioners.
All o the ollowing can be ound on the website (www.integration.eu) :A collection o innovative good practices on integration, presented in a clear and-comparable way : The practices are drawn rom European and national projects, localauthorities and civil society organisations. They are collected by using a commontemplate, so they can be easily compared ;Developments at EU level, such as new EC directives, Council conclusions, Commission-Communications ;Country inormation sheets, with the latest inormation concerning legislation and-policy programmes ;Tools such as the nd-a-project-partner-tool, which supports networking and-
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the development o common projects. This ranges rom basic inormation aboutorganisations working in the area o integration and a listing o people registeredwith the Site who wish to have their details shared ;
Inormation on unding opportunities : up-to-date inormation is an important-requirement or potential Site users. The Web Site brings together inormation aboutthe variety o European Commission unding opportunities available to practitioners,and promotes unding programmes run by Member States and private oundations ;A vast documentation library containing reports, policy papers, legislation and impact-assessments ;Forums or discussion : The moderated online orum provides digests o posts so-subscribers can scan what has been added and quickly decide whether to respond ;Regularly updated news and events : A regular email bulletin draws attention to useul-background material and case studies pertinent to current events ;A repository o links to external websites.-
The website was launched by the European Commission at the rst meeting o the
European Integration Forum in April 2009. The development o the Forum is undertaken
in cooperation with the European Economic and Social Committee, which has drawn up
an exploratory opinion on the role o civil society in promoting integration policies.
The Forum provides a consultation mechanism between civil society and the European
Commission. The EU Common Agenda armed that a comprehensive approach to
integration policy requires greater EU-level involvement o stakeholders rom all levels o
governance. The Forum represents one instrument to engage the actors o civil societyin this process.
A similar process at the city level, Integrating Cities, has brought together the EuropeanCommission and Eurocities, the network o major European cities. The series o annualconerences bridge the many level o governance and bring orward new ideas or thepractical implementation o the Common Basic Principles.
www.inticities.eu/
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Handbook on Integration 19
The European Integration Forum will provide a voice or representatives o civil society
on integration issues, in particular relating to the EU agenda on integration, and or
the Commission to take a pro-active role in such discussions. The Forum will providean added value as a complementary source o inormation, consultation, exchange
o expertise and in drawing up recommendations. The Common Basic Principles on
Integration will be the guide or the Forums activities.
European modules have been agreed by the Member States at the Potsdam and
Vichy ministerial conerences as one new means to urther develop the exchange o
inormation and good practice. Modules or topical integration issues are intended
as practical instruments to assist policy-makers and practitioners. The outputs could
involve standards, benchmarks, peer reviews and other tools at their disposal and useul
practical indications or successul implementation. They are a way to bring orward andelaborate on the work already undertaken in the various orms o European cooperation
on integration, including the three editions o the Handbook.
One o the key priorities or uture cooperation on integration policy is the development
o evaluation and benchmarking tools. Policy-makers can ensure that their integration
policies are based on practice and evidence by conducting impact assessments,
undertaking sel-assessments and peer reviews, and collecting public and hard-to-reach
migrant opinion. Indicators may be used or that purpose.
Common Basic Principle 11 calls or the development o indicators and evaluationmechanisms to adjust policy, evaluate progress and make the exchange o inormation
more eective. This Common Basic Principle expresses the need or tools and
yardsticks to enhance governments capacity to evaluate the relevance, eciency,
eectiveness, sustainability, and impact o policies and practices. Increasing calls at EU
level or indicator-based evaluations have been linked to new unding opportunities
or comparative indicators and evaluation rameworks. Over the past teen years,
the European Commission has supported hal a dozen research projects on the various
indicator types as well as easibility studies on the development o a common EU
benchmarking ramework.
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European exchange of information and good prac tice
Targeted fnancial instruments
Integration-related priorities have been refected in several mainstream nancial
programmes, such as the European Social Fund, as well as in the areas o urbandevelopment, education and culture. As or targeted integration policies or legally-
resident third-country nationals, the rst round o unding centred around the
transnational actions o the INTI programme (18 million Euros spent on 64 projects rom
2003 to 2006). These projects contributed to the development o technical cooperation
by promoting dialogue with civil society, evaluating practices and setting up networks
at EU level. Since 2007, the European Fund or the Integration o third-country nationals
(825 million Euros or 2007-2013) nances Member States annual programmes (93%
o the total budget) as well as Community actions (7%).
The general objective o the Integration Fund is to support the eorts made by Member
States in enabling third-country nationals to ull the conditions o residence and to
acilitate their integration into European societies. To this end, the Integration Fund
contributes to the development and implementation o national integration strategies in
all aspects o society, in particular taking into account the principle that integration is a
two-way dynamic process o mutual accommodation by both immigrants and citizens
o Member States.
According to Article 3 o the Decision, the Integration Fund shall contribute to the
ollowing specic objectives :Facilitation o the development and implementation o admission procedures relevant
to, and supportive o, the integration process o third-country nationals ;
Development and implementation o the integration process o newly-arrived
third-country nationals in Member States ;
Increasing o the capacity o Member States to develop, implement, monitor and
evaluate policies and measures or the integration o third-country nationals ;
Exchange o inormation, best practices and cooperation in and between Member
States in developing, implementing, monitoring and evaluating policies and measures
or the integration o third-country nationals.
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Handbook on Integration 21
1.2 The Handbook in ocus
The idea o a European Handbook on Integration emerged ater the ThessalonikiEuropean Council in June 2003. There, the Heads o State and Government stressed the
importance o developing cooperation and exchange o inormation within the newly
established NCPI network with a view to learning rom each other. To respond to this
call, the Handbook was prepared to drive and structure this exchange. The Handbook
exercise was intended to be an ongoing, inclusive process, a living instrument which
would not only improve over time on a step-by-step basis, but also contain updates on
new developments, solutions and evaluation results.
The intention is that policy-makers and practitioners draw on Handbook practices and
conclusions when developing and promoting priorities or initiatives. Generally speaking,policy-makers ormulate overall integration goals at their level o governance, make
resources available, monitor implementation and evaluate outcomes. Practitioners
translate goals into concrete programmes, set targets and undertake activities to reach
them. It is beyond the scope o the Handbook exercise to cover the ormation o overall
integration law and policy. Nor is it intended to describe specic programmes in great
detail. Rather, each chapter o the three Handbook editions revolves around practice-
based critical success actors, a non-exhaustive catalogue o good practice rom a
range o countries across the EU that meet one or more o those actors, and a set
o conclusions. The act that a particular country is mentioned in relation to specicactivities does not preclude that similar practices can be ound in others across the EU.
The Annexes to the Handbook explain how policies can be translated into projects and
vice-versa as well as how policy-makers and practitioners can engage in mutual learning
in order to improve their integration perormance.
The Handbooks chapters are based on the outcomes o ourteen technical seminars,
hosted by national authorities. Each hosting Member State proposed a technical
seminar on an issue o integration policy or governance and then, together with the
European Commission and the NCPIs, chose the workshop topics and speakers rom
across the EU.
The rst edition had three topics, refecting priorities identied in the European
Commissions 2003 Communication on Immigration, Integration and Employment.
Seminars in Copenhagen (February 2004), Lisbon (April 2004) and London (June 2004)
led to three chapters :
Introduction o newly-arrived immigrants and recognised reugees ;
Civic participation ;
Indicators.
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22 Handbook on Integration
European exchange of information and good prac tice
The second edition began to address topics rom the Common Basic Principles and
the EU Common Agenda. Five seminars in Tallinn (May 2005), Rome (July 2005),
Dublin (October 2005), Berlin (December 2005) and Madrid (April 2006) led to ourchapters :
Mainstreaming immigrant integration ;
Housing in an urban environment ;
Economic integration ;
Integration governance.
This third and current edition continues to provide a mix o substantive and methodo-
logical topics or exchange. Six seminars in Vienna (November 2007), Paris (November2007), Athens (March 2008), Dublin (May 2008), Lisbon (November 2008), and Tallinn
(February 2009) led to the ollowing chapters :
European exchange o inormation and good practice ;
Mass media and integration ;
Awareness-raising and migrant empowerment ;
Dialogue platorms ;
Acquisition o nationality and the practice o active citizenship ;
Immigrant youth, education and the labour market.
For each seminar, the NCPIs were invited to select a three-person delegation representing
their countrys diverse experience and expertise on the topic (i.e. regional/local
authorities, academics, experts, non-governmental stakeholders). Participants rom all
EU Member States, as well as non-EU countries including Australia, Canada, Norway,
Switzerland and the USA, participated in these seminars. Approximately one hundred
participants, rom all corners o the EU, and rom various levels inside and outside
government, contributed to each seminar. All can be considered as the authors o theHandbook, since their written and oral contributions serve as important sources o the
knowledge and examples presented in the chapters.
The Commission, the NCPIs and the independent consultant, the Migration Policy Group
(MPG), can be seen as editors preparing a conceptual ramework, taking stock o the
inormation gathered at each seminar, designing an evaluation ramework or selecting
practices, and conducting additional desk research. The independent consultant wrote a
series o issue papers to prepare each seminar and rame the discussions, as well as the
concluding document or the seminars. These documents were then discussed by the
NCPIs. All these elements make up the basic building blocks o the Handbook.
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The rst edition was presented at the Ministerial Conerence on Integration held in
Groningen on 9-11 November 2004 under the Dutch Presidency. The second was an
important part o the Inormal Meeting o EU Integration Ministers held in Potsdam on10-11 May 2007 under the German Presidency. Through Council Conclusions the EU
Member States have repeatedly invited the NCPIs and the Commission to continue
developing the Handbook, and expand and adapt its dissemination to its intended
audience. For this reason a decision was taken to translate the handbook into the Unions
ocial languages. All three editions are available at www.integration.eu. Z
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Chapter 2Mass media and integration
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Mass media and integration
In liberal democracies that guarantee the reedom o the press, the medias role is to
provide inormation, education, and entertainment. It unctions as a platorm or open
and honest communication about the positive and negative sides o social realities,including migration. It is a powerul medium or inuencing attitudes in society and
providing public inormation or the immigrant community and the rest o society.
European societies are becoming increasingly culturally and linguistically diverse as a
result o immigration, but this change is not always accurately reected in the media,
neither in the portrayal and representation o immigrants in the media, nor in terms o
the composition o media proessionals.
Initiatives to create and maintain a media that better serves and refects the cultural
diversity o European societies will, not only promote equality, but also help to acilitate
integration and support community cohesion. Media organisations and proessionals
such as sel-regulators, governments, politicians, the public, organised civil society and
private companies all have a role to play. This chapter outlines strategies or developing
the competencies o integration stakeholders.
2.1 Challenges and opportunities in the media environment
Globalisation
Globalisation and technological advancements have changed the nature o media itsel.
People have access to news, inormation and entertainment programmes produced in
countries around the globe, as well as those produced nationally, regionally and locally.
People access inormation through a wide range o mediums television, newspapers,
magazines, radio and the internet. The increased choice in media partly explains the
development o parallel media spaces where immigrants in Europe are able to watch
satellite television, listen to radio broadcasts and view internet news sites and discussion
orums rom their country or region o origin, or rom ethnic media organisations in
Europe. Immigrants oten nd inormation rom their home countries and regions more
reliable and trustworthy than the host country media. This may cause intercultural
miscommunications in society, which could in turn impede integration.
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Competition
Globalisation, coupled with technological advancements, mean that media organisations
are aced with increasing competition. To survive in a competitive market, mediaorganisations need to ensure that their products are tailored to the needs and wants o
their consumers. This is increasingly the case or public broadcasters as well as private
media enterprises. In this sense, competition presents an opportunity and a challenge
or integration.
A combination o technological change and industry turmoil has led to more precarious
employment, and less investment in editorial content and training, which aect
journalistic standards and quality. Time and budgetary restraints make it more dicult
or media proessionals to conduct background research and double check inormation.
In addition, many news providers rely on the old adage bad news sells which encourages
sensationalist stories and scaremongering about immigration. As a result, programmes
and articles tend to give the voice o immigrants lesser prominence and credibility ; show
immigrants in stereotypical roles ; rarely include immigrants as news actors in media
coverage that is not immigrant-related ; and rely on episodic raming (single events)
rather than thematic raming which provides the context and description necessary to
enhance understanding and empathy about immigrant issues.
The fip side o this coin is that immigrants and their descendents are a growing
consumer group in Europe. Immigrants represent a potential increase in audience sizeand distribution to media organisations. Media organisations need to ensure their
products cater to an increasingly culturally-diverse market i they wish to remain viable.
I mainstream media ails to cater eectively to the needs and wants o immigrants,
then ethnic media will become more prominent, as will the use o satellite television,
radio broadcasts, internet news sites and discussion orums rom countries and regions
o origin.
Medias reection o society
The media impacts on the public perception o immigrants. It also, however, refects
the views and attitudes that are prevalent in society some tolerant, some intolerant,
others openly hostile and some indierent. Likewise, the medias approach towards
migration and integration issues ranges rom sympathy to active advocacy ; and rom
casual and unintentional bias to xenophobia by design. Media organisations can be
encouraged to provide an accurate and air portrayal o immigrants in the media. The
media cannot, however, be expected to promote an integration agenda unless it is in
their interest to do so.
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Mass media and integration
Regulation o the media
Debates about the media and integration touch on undamental rights and reedoms.
Freedom o expression is a undamental right o any unctioning democracy and should notbe compromised. This right, which is enshrined in Article 10 o the European Convention
o Human Rights and in Constitutions o many states, allows controversial ideas and
discussions to be put orward in the media, including those that portray immigrants in
a negative way and which may impede integration. It is also, however, the role o any
unctioning democracy to protect people rom racist and xenophobic discourse that
incites hatred. The challenge European societies are aced with is protecting people rom
hate speech whilst simultaneously protecting the right to reedom o expression.
Sel-regulation o the media, particularly o the press media does exist, but is requently
criticised or not being eective enough in curbing inaccurate and sensationalist
reporting and protecting immigrants rom discrimination. In comparison to the print
media, public broadcasting is more regulated in some countries and can involve quotas
on multicultural content and the implementation o positive action measures. There are
limits to regulating the broadcasting industry in Europe due to the dierent levels o
diversity, dierent concentrations o the immigrant population within the country, and
the position migration holds on the political agenda.
The media generally believe that existing regulation impinges on press reedom and
independent journalism. Conversely, more regulation is oten considered by governmentsand civil society organisations to be the panacea. Many experts are o the opinion that
the regulatory ramework required to achieve a air and balanced portrayal o immigrants
in the media is largely in place and that the problems do not lie with a lack o laws, codes
and guidelines, but in their decient implementation.
Understanding media actors
Many people view the Media as a singular entity. Such simplication is both incorrect
and unhelpul. The media environment is incredibly diverse, spanning dierent levels(global, national, regional, local), ormats (TV, radio, print, and internet), ownership and
audiences.
The media constitutes a universe in itsel and it can be dicult or integration actors to
nd their way in a conglomerate o media organisations, each with their own mission
and interests. Integration actors who wish to infuence the media should understand
the structures and mechanisms under which the media and media proessionals have to
work and this can be achieved by mapping the media environment, whether at the local,
regional, national or European level.
The media industry is highly complicated, because there are many players and actors
which are depending, infuencing and cooperating with each other. Stakeholders include
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legislators, media owners, media management companies, production companies,
acility companies, advertising companies, audience research and rating institutes,
pollsters, recruitment agencies, training institutes, consumer organisations, minorityorganisations, workers unions, teachers unions, religious organisations, political parties,
pressure groups, journalists, human resource managers, programme makers and opinion
leaders.
Actors who wish to map the media environment need to consider our main areas :
Media organisations which produce and broadcast
Integration actors who wish to make the media more diverse or attempt to balance
the portrayal o immigrants need rstly to determine which kind o media organisation
is most appropriate or them to work with. Is it local, regional, national or global andis it public or commercial ? How and where does it broadcast, what are its aims and
objectives, what are the particularities o this media organisation and how does it related
to other organisations ? They then need to understand what environment the media
company is operating in and which stakeholders are involved, or instance : who owns
the company ; what are the company policies (commercial, journalistic, programming,
personnel, diversity policies, sponsor and PR policies and political alliances) ; and what
acilitators produce and broadcast their programmes ? It is also important to develop an
understanding o the role o the broad range o media proessions and organisational
departments.Legislation and controlling bodies that determine the way the media can operate.
To balance public portrayals and ght racism in the media, it is important to have
knowledge o the types o press complaints mechanisms that exist in the media,
journalism unions and within anti-racism legislation. I dealing with a controlling body,
it is necessary rst to identiy the status o the institute. Is the media accountable to a
governmental institute by law or to an institute based on sel-regulation by the media
themselves ? When and what are the media required to report on ? Are these reports
open to the public ? What are the responsibilities o the controlling body i the media do
not abide by the requirements ?
The media users
The media users passive role as an audience member is expanding to become more
interactive. Media users increasingly participate in programmes, develop their own
websites and act as inormal controllers o the media, or example through ratings and
complaints. Integration actors wishing to infuence the media can capitalise on the
growing infuence o the media user. This can be achieved by encouraging them to make
greater use o complaints structures, to create their own media platorms, to participate
in interactive media discussions and by promoting media education in schools to improvemedia literacy.
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Labour Market
Integration actors who wish to make the labour orce in the media industry more diverse
in the short and longer term should identiy the stakeholders and possible changeagents responsible or general labour market issues like vocational training, career
orientation, job coaching and employment policies. These include workers unions,
employers associations, vocational training institutes and national media career advice
centres, who determine the environment in which new media proessionals can enter the
media industry and encourage employers to train their employees in new intercultural
competencies and skills.
More detailed advice on mapping the media environment can be ound in the paperThinking forward : Making the Media more Diverse and the Role of Change Agents :
www.eumap.org/advocacy/advoc_eumap/media/TV_ollowup/index
See also Media4Diversity : taking the pulse of diversity in the media :
http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?langId=nl&catId=423&newsId=512&urtherNews=yes
Mapping the media environment can be a time-intensive task. Due to resource
constraints, many integration actors may nd it is not possible to conduct a mappingexercise. It would, thereore, be valuable to develop an awareness o organisations who
have mapped dierent media environments so that these organisations can act as a
resource or others.
Once the mapping process is complete, actors will be in a much better position to
understand why, how and i particular media organisations would be interested in
partnerships. The interests between integration actors and media organisations may be
shared, overlapping or conficting. The mapping process helps actors understand how to
pitch their message at the right level and to the right person.
Taking the time to map the media environmentin terms o the main actors, legislative
ramework, users, and labour markethelps integration actors to understand why, how,
and which media organisations are interested in working together towards a more
accurate and balanced portrayal o immigrants and a more ethnically diverse
workorce.
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2.2 Developing an eective media strategy
For many integration actors, the media can be either an idle ally or an enemy. Integrationactors should give consideration to developing a media strategy, aligning it to the mission
o media organisation(s), raming their message and developing strategic alliances.
A media strategy is likely to be more eective i the actor has mapped the media
environment and identied and analysed the stakeholders. Consideration should also be
given to developing a pro-active longer term media strategy since media coverage is at
its most eective in changing attitudes when it is sustained.
How to communicate : Strategic communication on migration and integration, published
by a King Baudouin Foundation, Belgium, provides practical advice or civil societyorganisations wishing to better engage with the media.
www.kbs-rb.be/uploadedles/KBS-FRB/05)_Pictures,_documents_and_external_sites/09)_Publications/PUB_1624_How_to_Communicate.pd
Integration actors should consider how their agenda ts with the mission o the media
organisation and its departments and align their media strategy accordingly. Examples
o strategies which support the mission o the media organisation are :
Providing journalists with consistent and reliable inormation. Journalists are under
increasing pressures and have much less time to research stories. A well-written press release
is invaluable in gaining media coverage and user-riendly actual publications (with good
executive summaries) can provide journalists with the necessary contextual inormation ;
Ensuring their own website has up-to-date relevant inormation and is user-riendly
so that journalists can easily access inormation, press releases and publications ;
Building a diversity database to help journalists nd spokespersons, experts and
individual immigrants to provide stories o their own experience.
Integration actors can generate more presence in their local media environment byincluding public relations in their strategic planning, and aligning their approach to meet
the overall missions and quality standards o media organisations.
Integration actors need to establish clear aims and objectives or their media strategy,
identiy their intended audience and tailor their message accordingly. The dierent
parts o government oten send mixed messages about immigration and its desirability.
Governments and other stakeholders can correct mixed messages and misperceptions o
immigrants by using the media as a vehicle to educate the public about immigration and
integration issues and can also nance independent research into the role and contribution
o immigrants in the host society and use the media to disseminate the ndings.
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Actors need to think about how to sensitise the public to immigration issues. For
example, they can ocus on similar values and the human interest angle through the
use o personal stories and case studies. They can encourage media actors to avoiddenitive statements that provoke a divided reaction. Consideration must also be given
to the media style o the target media organisation. For example, tabloid press are more
likely to pick up emotive stories, so using personal accounts o immigrants may be more
eective, whereas broadsheet papers may look or quantitative data and contextual
inormation.
Examples o strategies which ensure the message is communicated eectively are :
Training specialised spokespersons who can legitimately speak on behal o immigrant
communities and can explain and promote issues in a way which is media-riendly ;
Broadening their support. Many civil society organisations all into the trap o catering
to their existing supporters, rather than widening their appeal to the majority o the
public ;
Using the local press. The local press is highly infuential due to the signicant
readership o the weekly community newspapers and the act that integration is
experienced by people at the local, not national, level. Oten stories that are run in
the local press are picked up by the national media ;
Cultivating productive working relationships with editors and journalists, not just
those that are supportive o immigration issues, but also those who are not ;
Educating the public to be more critical o media output by explaining the infuence
o cultural and social backgrounds in both presentation and interpretation ;
Monitoring media output and discussing ndings with media organisations, journalists
and editors, and making use o complaints bodies (ombudsmen, equality bodies,
press councils) where appropriate.
Integration actors should look within their local context and past experiences or ideas
on how to aim and rame their message or a speciic intended audience.
The Central Oce o Inormation (UK) produced a publication in 2004 which exploresthe social, cultural and attitudinal actors that impact on the communications needso ethnic minority communities, and provides strategic and creative guidance oncommunicating with ethnic minority communities.
www.coi.gov.uk/documents/common-good-bme-exec-summ.pd
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The media environment is simply too big and too diverse or one integration actor to
change. Integration actors should consider collaborating with other stakeholders to
deliver a consistent and strong message at the local, regional, national, or EU level.Civil society organisations can develop relationships with government ocials to
harmonise messages, or where the messages are conficting, to ensure the viewpoints o
civil society have been taken into consideration by government, and that the civil society
response is cognisant o the governments concerns.
Integration actors can link existing initiatives and stakeholders and acilitate and support
community media initiatives. Collaborations between government, academic institutions
and research institutes can help to develop a baseline o research and data to inorm
immigration debates through the media.
Strategic alliances between civil society, government, research institutes, and media
proessionals organisations can help attain impact in a domain as broad and diverse as
the media.
The MIGRACE project conducted by People in Need (Clovek v tisni), an NGO aliatedwith Czech Television, countered stereotyping by publicising migration issues in themass media (TV, radio, newspapers, journals, magazines, and cultural and educationalprogrammes) and by inorming the Czech public about the challenges and opportunitiesoered by migration.
www.diskriminace.ino/dp-migrace/program_migrace.phtml
The Leicester Mercury, a UK local newspaper, is a partner o Leicesters MulticulturalAdvisory Group involving leading municipal, community, aith, volunteer, and academicgures. The papers editor engages in regular dialogue to achieve a greater understandingbetween the media and community groups. The partnership has led to more inormedreporting and editorial decision, a new daily column written by dierent local people,and improved outreach with readers in harder-to-reach immigrant groups.
http://83.137.212.42/sitearchive/cre/about/sci/casestudy5_leicester.html
The Forum on Migration and Communications, led by the Dublin Institute o Technology,brings together immigrant and non-immigrant media producers, NGO service providers/community activists and social and policy researchers to ampliy immigrant voices andperspectives previously absent, sensationalised or marginalised in dominant mediarepresentations through a series o media-led projects that highlight personal andcollective stories about amily reunication and undocumented migration.
www.omacs.org
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The government o the Austrian province o Tyrol has collaborated with the media toimplement its integration agenda. Focused reporting by mainstream journalists and
journalists o immigrant background provide the public with insight into the daily lie and
contributions o immigrants to the host society. Themes include the role and contributiono immigrants in the labour market ; the amily lie o those who are embracing twocultures ; involvement in sports and entertainment ; and the social situation o dierenttypes o immigrants, e.g. asylum seekers, reugees, permanent residents, temporaryworkers/seasonal workers, students, etc.
www.tirol.gv.at/themen/gesellschat-und-soziales/integration
Developing the intercultural competencies o media organisations
Media proessionals need to develop intercultural competence to work eectively in
a diverse environment and can lead to improvements in accuracy, impartiality and
airness. The intercultural competencies or journalists have been identied at the sixth
EquaMedia Transnational Meeting held in Rome in 2004 as :
Knowledge : Know who the main actors in society are, their role in society and their
background (religion, cultural habits and history) ;
Skills and experiences : In addition to intercultural communication skills, to be able to
nd and develop sources ; make a journalistic product on a multicultural subject ; andset up an intercultural network ;
Attitude : To be open-minded, inquisitive (going directly to the source rather than the
spokesperson or the community), and be willing to give greater control to the people
being interviewed.
The acquisition o intercultural competence can be incorporated into the curriculum o
media schools. As many people enter into the proession without ormal qualications
in journalism or media studies, intercultural training can also be incorporated into
proessional development courses and on-the-job training oered by media organisations,
proessional bodies and unions. Ongoing training in intercultural competencies is vital
as both the composition o society and the immigration debates within society are
changeable. Training initiatives should be targeted towards editors, journalists, teaching
sta and sel-regulatory bodies. Integration actors can provide assistance to media and
journalism schools in the development o courses on immigration and cultural diversity.
Providing materials, trainings, and dialogue platorms on intercultural competence is one
highly practical way to work directly with media proessionals during their studies and
all throughout their proessional development. The irst step is securing commitment
rom media educators and administrators.
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The Society o Editors and the Media Trust (UK) has developed the guide ReportingDiversity to assist journalists in reporting airly on immigrant issues. It provides asnapshot o changing communities, highlights particular issues acing journalists inreporting on community issues, and draws on examples o good practice rom variousmedia contexts.
www.societyoeditors.co.uk/userles/le/Reporting%20Diversity.pd
The Austrian Integration Funds quarterly thematic magazine, Integration im Fokus,is an accessible source o inormation particularly directed at journalists and keycommunicators like politicians and educators. The mass medias extremely positiveresponse to the publication and its 17,000 circulation rate indicate that it lls a gap inthe market or special interest media.
www.integrationsonds.at/index.php?id=130
For training to be eective, all stakeholders must be committed, senior management
must support objectives, and the training programme must be linked closely to media
output. Management support can be secured by linking outcomes o training to their
desire or international recognition, the need to comply with legislation, the promise
o tangible improvements and study trips abroad. Support rom journalists and other
media proessionals can be encouraged by providing improved skills and knowledge ;
oering incentives such as prizes, study trips, certicates ; opportunities or networking ;
and simply a change o routine, and a pleasant experience.
Intercultural training should retain a practical ocus on skill-building. For example,
reports on migration should be produced as part o training. It should also provide advice
on developing better communication with integration actors, including government
agencies, civil society organisations and immigrant communities. The eectiveness
o the training should be evaluated. This can best be achieved by monitoring media
coverage beore and ater training.
The European Broadcasting Commission, with the Swedish European Social FundCouncil and EU Fundamental Rights Agency, developed the Diversity Toolkit or actualprogrammes in public service television to equip TV proessionals to promote theprinciples o cultural diversity across their services. The Toolkit brings together elementso practical inormation (checklists, reerences) and good practice advice that can beused, applied and learned rom. It includes a DVD with extracts rom news and currentaairs programmes rom a dozen European countries illustrating some o the dicultiesacing journalists when they report on minorities.
http://ra.europa.eu/raWebsite/attachments/media-toolkit_diversity_en.pd
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The Spanish Observatory o Racism and Xenophobia has developed, in cooperationwith the most relevant mainstream and migrant media, the Practical Guide for MediaProfessionals : media treatment of immigration issues. It includes key recommendations
when dealing with immigration, practical tools and advice on how to implement them ineveryday work and a list o relevant contacts and web-pages or media proessionals.
www.oberaxe.es/les/datos/47d1394b65cc8/GUIA%20MEDIOS%20ELECTRONICANIPO.pd
Editors and journalists can develop their networks to ensure they have a better
understanding o the immigrant community, and the issues that aect them, so that
they can better cater to their needs and so they can speak either to people who are
directly involved in the incident/issue, or to a person who can speak accurately and
legitimately on behal o those people.
Discussion platorms can also be initiated to better understand the impact o the media
on integration. Constructive dialogues with selected media stakeholders also enable a
rapid response to changing events on the ground.
Perslink (Presslink), an initiative o Mira Media, Dutch Public Broadcasting and theDutch Union o Journalists, has developed various instruments, including a diversitydatabase, to improve contacts between ethnic minority communities and the media in
order to provide more balanced inormation about multicultural society and migrants.Spokespersons receive media training, and network meetings bring spokespersons andjournalists together.
www.perslink.nl
Integration actors can make the most o their recognised expertise and authority
on integration by recognising and rewarding good media practice. These acts create
incentives or editors and journalists to work on the portrayal and inclusion o migrants
in the media.
Good media practice can be encouraged by media organisations, government and civil
society by awarding prizes or excellence.
The CIVIS Media Foundations prizes include the European CIVIS Television Prize andthe German CIVIS Television Prize (Category Inormation), and the German CIVIS RadioPrizes (Short programme and long programme).
www.civismedia.eu/tv/civis
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The For Diversity. Against Discrimination Journalist Award is granted by the EuropeanUnion to honour journalists whose work contributes to a better public understanding othe benets o diversity and the ght against discrimination in society.
http://journalistaward.stop-discrimination.ino
Reugee Week Scottish Media Awards, organised by the Asylum Positive Images Network,which includes Oxam, National Union o Journalists, Amnesty International, British RedCross and Scottish Reugee Council, are given to journalists who have contributed toexceptional and air reporting o asylum in Scotland.
www.reugeeweek.org.uk/scotland
The Minderhedenorums Tremedia (Flanders Belgium) annually presents the
Intercultural TV Award. Programmes aiming to approach ethno-cultural diversity roma non-stereotypical point-o-view may obtain a nomination.
www.tremedia.be
2.3 Creating a more diverse media
Immigrants are less likely to pursue a career in the media or a number o reasons, all
o which recruitment strategies are advised to address. These include the lack o rolemodels, both in their community and visible in the media ; a career in the media not being
desirable in a number o cultures with preerence given to a career with more stable
employment opportunities ; and the lack o knowledge within immigrant communities
about the range o jobs available in the media industry.
The changing demographics o European societies mean that young immigrants will
constitute a signicant part o the uture workorce. Recruitment strategies carried
out by media organisations and training institutions need to demonstrate to young
immigrants, and their parents, that the media industry will take them seriously and
oer them equal opportunities (legislation is in place to protect immigrants romdiscrimination on the grounds o their race, ethnicity, or religion, but not on the basis
o their immigrant statusper se).
Media organisations can organise media career days at secondary schools, oer special
work experience schemes and provide college bursaries. Trade unions, employers
organisations, and community organisations also play an important role in encouraging
young immigrants to pursue a career in the media. For example, community organisations
can involve young immigrants in local community media projects.
Feedback rom underrepresented groups in the media can be used to design targetedrecruitment strategies making journalism a more attractive career option or young
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CREAM is a European project consisting o various media education activities andcareer orientation events or young people, carried out in co-operation with the media
industry. Together, these activities and events oer students, particularly those romethnic minorities, the opportunity to experience work within the media and encouragethem to choose studies which prepare them or a career in the media.
www.olmcm.org/section.php?SectionID=10
Finlands Mundo project is a media education and work-training project aimed atimmigrants and reugee groups. The project oers comprehensive media training,including work placements in media organisations and also aims to develop mentors orindividual immigrant and ethnic minority media students with a migration background.
www.yle./mundoDigiTales encourages immigrants to consider a career in the media by involving them ina digital storytelling project in which they make a short lm about their lie. Through theprocess, they can learn how to write a script, record a voiceover and edit photos, videosand drawings into a lm.
www.digi-tales.org
Diversity mentoring schemes and development opportunities enable and empower
the person being mentored to maximise their potential. This can be achieved through
realistic and achievable career development programmes ; enabling individualsto overcome organisational barriers that hinder promotion and progression ; and
developing competencies and increasing motivation. Media proessionals rom
immigrant backgrounds can also be encouraged to orm networks through trade unions
and working groups in order to provide each other with proessional support, including
advice on training, job opportunities and career development.
Ethnic media organisations can promote integration while preserving ethnic and cultural
identity. This dual approach helps to open up opportunities o an alternative discourse
with the mainstream media, while at the same time providing a bridge to the country
and culture o origin. Ethnic media can play an important role in challenging perceptions
within the general public. It gives a voice to immigrant groups, allows them to present
themselves airly, enter into a dialogue with the host society, and articulate grievances.
For these reasons, media organisations and integration stakeholders should consider
oering mentoring and development opportunities to proessionals working in the
ethnic media.
Mentoring and development opportunities or both new and current proessionals rom
immigrant backgrounds are eective tools or enhancing a media organisations diversity
policy on recruitment, promotion, and retention.
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MediamRad is a 3-year European programme o the Institut PANOS Paris to increasethe pluralism o opinions and reinorce the diversity o points o view in the media
by supporting lasting collaborations and partnerships between ethnic media andmainstream media. Its activities include skill-sharing workshops on proessionalpractices and experiences, European media meetings, comparative content analysis onmedia inormation published by ethnic media and mainstream media, and a und orencouraging partnership all o which provide developmental opportunities or ethnicmedia proessionals.
www.mediamrad.org/
Given the shortage o ethnic media proessionals, oreign-trained media proessionals are
an under-utilised resource. Oten their qualications and experience are not recognised
by employers or unions. Furthermore, employment opportunities in the media are oten
advertised by word-o-mouth, which excludes media proessionals not currently studying
or working in the industry. Media organisations, proessional organisations, unions and
employers organisations should consider targeting oreign-trained proessionals in their
recruitment strategies and organising training, which provides the skills and knowledge
required or the oreign-trained proessional to work eectively in the host country.
Foreign journalists persecuted or pursuing their proession can be orced into exile and be
recognised on those grounds as reugees in a European country. These proessionals can
then have their qualications recognised and be supported to continue their proessionin Europe. This could be achieved by providing a skills-assessment and training scheme,
a programme o work placements, scholarships or exiled journalists to do research or
undertake training courses, and the establishment o networks or exiled journalists to
share inormation and promote training and work opportunities.
State authorities and civil society actors play a key role in acilitating employment
avenues and the recognition o the skills and qualiications o one oten untapped
resourceoreign-trained media proessionals and, speciically, journalists in exile.
The Exiled Journalists Network (UK), supported by the National Union o Journalists andthe MediaWise Trust, assists journalists who have fed to the UK to escape persecutionbecause o their media work. It builds upon the RAM project, which supported exiled
journalists by providing work placements, training and inormation on the UK mediaenvironment, setting up their own media operation, career entry points and trainingproviders. Access to specialist training courses is also provided by the National Uniono Journalists. In addition, the RAM project created a Directory o Exiled Journaliststo encourage editors in both the print and broadcast media to oer employment orcommissions to exiled journalists.
www.exiledjournalists.net
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Implementation o diversity strategies
Eective diversity strategies tend to share the ollowing characteristics. They are :
Presented as a necessary response to the changing demographics o the audience
and the workorce ;
Integrated into all acets o the media organisation and are visible in the actions o the
Chie Executives and senior managers, recruitment strategies, the workplace, story and
programme selection, community relations and in marketing and communications ;
Include rm commitments and targets, against which progress is closely monitored
and detailed in annual reports ;
Are accompanied by a specic diversity budget.
The Dutch Government has had a media and diversity policy in place since 1996accompanied by a specic budget or NGO, print press and broadcasting initiatives.Dutch Public Broadcasting has an achievement contract with the government o whichdiversity goals orm a part. For example, it has the legislative task to dedicate 20% oits television broadcasting time and 25% o its radio broadcasting time to multiculturalprogramming.
Diversity and Equal Employment Opportunities are part o the UK Broadcasting Act,
while there are also specic governmental diversity policies concerning dierent aspectso, and stakeholders in, the media. The BBC is committed to refecting the diversity othe UK and to making its services accessible to all citizens. Its Diversity Centre regularlycarries out portrayal monitoring surveys to assess the representation o minorities inprimetime programming/coverage at regional and national levels.
www.bbc.co.uk/ino/policies/diversity.shtml
The Belgian broadcaster VRT established a Charter or Diversity in 2003, which ormedthe basis or the institution o the Diversity Cell. It establishes networks with minorityassociations, youth organisations, and intercultural media with the dual aim o talent-
scouting and providing contacts o possible participants in programmes. It also initiatesawareness raising and diversity training with colleagues and provides contacts o minorityexperts and provides advice on including diversity issues in mainstream programming.
www.vrt.be/vrt_master/over/vrt_overvrt_diversiteit_engagement_charter_bis/index.shtml
France Tlvisions launched a Positive Action Plan or Integration in 2004. In cooperationwith Radio France International, it is responsible or the project PlurielMedia, whichcarries out research on diversity inside France Tlvisions, diversity training or managers,intercultural training or journalists, and training o young media proessionals romethnic minority groups working in French television.
www.rancetelevisions.r
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