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Valuing & Reclaiming Free and Independent Media in Contemporary Democratic Systems (MEDIADEM) Federica Casarosa CMPF Summer School 2013 for Journalists and Media Practitioners http://cmpf.eui.eu/training/summer-school-2013.aspx
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European Media Policies Revisited: Valuing & Reclaiming Free and Independent Media in Contemporary Democratic Systems (MEDIADEM)
Summer School for Journalists and Media Practitioners
Federica Casarosa
Florence, 13/05/2013
Outline
MEDIADEM research project – organisation and objectives
Regulation of professional activity
Copyright and freedom of expression
Mediadem
MEDIADEM is a European research project on media
policies for free and independent media.
The project examined the configuration of state media policies that target or
conversely constrain the development of free and independent media.
12 EU countries (Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany,
Greece, Italy, Romania, Slovakia, Spain and the UK) and 2 EU candidate
countries (Croatia and Turkey).
Analysis across media sectors and various types of media services, including
‘new’ media services.
Domestic socio-political context and external regulatory pressures (EU, Council
of Europe).
Project duration: April 2011-March 2013 - concluded
The consortium
The project is an interdisciplinary effort of 14 institutional partners:
Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB, Belgium, Pierre-François Doquir)
Centre for Liberal Strategies (CLS, Bulgaria, Daniel Smilov)
Institute for International Relations (IMO, Croatia, Nada Švob-Đokić )
University of Copenhagen (UCPH, Denmark, Henrik Søndergaard )
University of Tartu (UT, Estonia, Halliki Harro-Loit)
University of Jyväskylä (JYU, Finland, Heikki Kuutti)
University of Bielefeld (UNIBI, Germany, Christoph Gusy )
Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP, Greece, Evangelia Psychogiopoulou).
European University Institute (EUI, Italy, Fabrizio Cafaggi)
Hertie School of Governance (HERTIE, Germany/Romania, Alina Mungiu-Pippidi)
School of Communication and Media (SKAMBA, Slovakia, Andrej Skolkay)
University of Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM, Spain, Susana de la Sierra)
Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV, Turkey, Dilek Kurban)
University of Edinburgh (UEDIN, UK, Rachael Craufurd Smith).
The research team includes lawyers, political scientists, experts in media and journalism
studies and sociologists.
Research questions
Questions
How are media policies formulated?
How are media policies implemented?
What factors contribute to the formulation and implementation of
media policies?
Do the policies conducted promote free and independent media?
What are ‘free and independent’ media?
What policy processes and regulatory tools can promote free and
independent media?
Media policy-making (1)
MEDIADEM:
Presumes that media policy-making is not a disinterested process.
Rules and norms are not adopted and applied through bureaucratic,
technical procedures.
Adopts an institutionalist perspective focused on the contribution of
the various policy actors in policy formulation and implementation.
Focus on intermediate-level institutions (i.e. policy networks
linking economic groups to the state bureaucracy, party structures,
corporatist arrangements, etc) and their strategic interactions.
Type of analysis: particularly appropriate given the substantial increase
in the number of policy participants, the venues in which decisions are
made and the processes through which decisions are taken.
Media policy-making (2)
Actors: next to governmental bodies and state ministries, independent
regulatory authorities, private corporations, media and journalists’
associations, trade unions, civil society organisations working in the field of
human rights but also individuals with an interest in the areas and topics dealt
with (media professionals, scholars, etc) seek to affect policy.
National and European Courts: judicial decisions can have a substantial influence in
supporting or challenging decisions made by policy-makers, as well as in promoting
or conversely undermining the implementation and enforcement of particular laws.
Venues: State based institutional arrangements (more or less centralised) are
supplemented by supranational settings (CoE, EU) affecting the configuration
of national media policies.
Processes through which media policies are shaped: processes of state
regulation, co-regulation and self-regulation.
Work plan (1)
Phase 1: State of the art Collection of background information on the 14 media policies and landscapes under
study; the media-related action of the European Union and the Council of Europe.
Reaching a common understanding on key concepts upon which the project is founded
(e.g. ‘media policy’, ‘media freedom and independence’).
Phase 2: Case-studies Empirical research in the 14 countries under study:
Investigation of media policy tools and the processes through which the rules are applied,
monitored and enforced
State regulation, co-regulation, self-regulation
Traditional media and new media services.
Methodology: desk research (primary & secondary sources) and semi-structured interviews
with domestic actors involved in media policy making and implementation.
Work plan (2)
•Phase 3: Comparative analysis
Cross-state and cross-media comparative report which will explain variable patterns of media
policy-making and regulation to the benefit/detriment of media freedom and independence.
The analysis will cover the following thematic areas:
• The independence of public service media in Europe.
• Media policy strategies of the MEDIADEM countries from central and eastern Europe and
their implications for media freedom and independence.
• Media policy strategies pertaining to new media services and their implications for media
freedom and independence.
• Journalists’ professional autonomy as a factor supportive of freedom of expression and
the right to information.
• Domestic and European courts and their contribution to the protection of media
freedom.
Report on media freedom and independence: The regulatory quest for legitimacy,
effectiveness, quality and enforcement.
•Phase 4: Policy development
Formulation of concrete policy recommendations for state and non-state actors involved in
media policy-making, the European Union and the Council of Europe for the promotion of free
and independent media
Professional regulation (1)
The regulation of media professionals
Journalistic activity has traditionally been considered as an instrument
of freedom of expression.
The concept of professional journalism are not so neat
• Definitions of journalists by public regulation are lacking in most of
the countries
• Only private regulation provides for criteria that inform journalistic
activity facing problems of accommodating new forms of news
production including user-generated content.
Domestic and European courts, instead, intervened in several
occasions so as to qualify journalistic activity and the rights and
obligations flowing thereof.
Professional regulation (2)
Private regulation in professional activity
Historically, journalism has been primarily self-regulated by the profession, as it
fell into the press regulation category.
• in the press the role of professional self-regulation has been predominant, in
broadcasting co-regulatory models have emerged due to the higher level of public
content regulation and the presence of public service broadcasting
Even within this general trend, defined by European legislation, differences
across Member States remain remarkable.
In some cases integrated models across media regulate journalistic activity. Co-
regulatory models emerge due to legislative intervention or, more recently due
to developments of legislation (Belgium, Denmark).
In other cases, regulation is fragmented and the press remains separated from
broadcast and electronic media with the exceptions of online newspapers
regulated within the press sector (Bulgaria, Germany and UK).
Professional regulation (3)
A definition of journalist
The definition of journalists and journalistic activity plays greater importance in
defining regulatory strategies and the allocation between public and private
regulation.
The consequences of drawing such boundaries are linked with the granting of
special privileges, e.g. access to sources or events, or the statutory right to
protection of sources, or constitutional protection from claims of libel or
privacy invasion.
Two macro-models
• The status based definition, generally associated with the presence of a
strong professional association based on membership, which defines who
is a journalist and the applicable rules for journalistic conduct; and
• The activity based self-regulatory regimes, developed where no strong
professional associations exist
Professional regulation (4)
Regulatory bodies
journalists associations
“shared” power with industry representatives within press councils
• New press councils have been set up, leaving the pure association
model an exception (limited to Greece and Italy)
• Threat of state intervention in the field or inability of the
professional self-regulation to achieve the expected results of
monitoring and enforcement of ethical rules among journalists.
• Again exceptions emerge: Estonia (where two press councils partly
overlap, creating inconsistencies) and the UK (due to the phone-
hacking scandal)
Professional regulation (5)
Instruments and scope of self-regulation
All countries surveyed provide for multimedia codes of conduct.
Formally, the majoritarian model shows that regulation applies regardless the
medium through which journalists disseminate content;
Exceptions still exist either based on content distinction (e.g. Bulgaria,
Germany and UK) or on sector distinction (e.g. Italy and Turkey).
Citizen journalism and blogging are still not within the remit of Press Council
regulation, though increasingly assuming public relevance
The distinction is based on the fact that social media are used by journalists to
express their opinions and for disseminating news content to the public.
This implies that is the fact that professional journalists use social networks
that makes them subject to journalistic ethics, whereas the same rules are not
applicable where an individual produces the same news content on social
networks.
Copyright protection and freedom of expression (1)
Potential conflict between copyright and FoE within the news
supply chains
Copyright grants content owners a limited monopoly with
respect to the communication of their works; whereas freedom
of expression warrants the freedom to hold opinions and to
receive and impart information and ideas.
National courts have interpreted in different ways the scope of
copyright law vis-à-vis freedom of expression, reflecting different
traditions in interpreting freedom of expression.
Copyright protection and freedom of expression (2)
Copyright protection of news
Subject to specific regulations, due to the type of content (usually compiled
and reused for informative purposes)
What is the role of online news aggregators? Is their activity lawful under
current copyright legislation?
European Directive 2001/29/EC on the harmonisation of certain aspects of
copyright and related rights in the information society did not expressly define
the threshold of originality to be applied to news articles
• fragmented interpretation of the threshold in several countries
• CJEU ruling in Infopaq seems to have facilitated a more harmonised
interpretation regarding the level of originality to be applied to news
snippets (see Copiepresse in Belgium, Meltwater in the UK).
Copyright protection and freedom of expression (3)
Current interventions at national level
Regulatory interventions have also been undertaken though they are very
fragmented and several regulatory processes are ongoing.
• France government signed an agreement with Google to create an so-
called Digital Publishing Innovation Fund to support publishers with the
transformation to digital publishing
• In Germany, a decision adopted in March 2012 by the coalition committee
to require that ISPs pay an equitable remuneration for disseminating
“press products“, within the time limit of one year after the publication
• An amendment proposed to the Italian Law on Copyright Protection
intended to provide stronger protection of copyright for newspaper
publishers vis-à-vis search engines and news aggregators.
All this interventions aim at striking a different balance between the economic
interests of traditional news providers vis-à-vis emerging nomadic giants such
as Google.
More information & links
Project website: www.mediadem.eliamep.gr
Scientific coordination: Dr Evangelia Psychogiopoulou,
Thank you!