
Raphael Cohen-Almagor is an israeli professor (he's the founder and  director of the Center for Democratic Studies at the University of Haifa) and he  wrote a paper called "Media Coverage of Acts of Terrorism: Troubling Episodes and  Suggested Guidelines"; the paper was published in vol 30-3 (2005) of Canadian Journal  of Communication.
 In the paper you can read a long list of unprofessional and unethical  mistakes made by journalists during coverage of acts of terrorism.
 Journalists should never forget that when they report some news, they do  not give information only to the public, they do give information to the public  and to the terrorists.
 Sometimes it seems that the rule of the scoop is more important than the  rule of saving human lives. And the consequence can be a matter of life or  death.
 At the end of the paper, the author wrote some guidelines for  journalists:
 - The media need to be accountable for the consequences of their  coverage
 - The media should not jeopardize human life
 - The media are advised to co-operate with the government when human lives  are at stake in order to bring a peaceful end to the terrorist episode. This is  not to suggest that the police or other security organizations should have a  veto power over reporting. What is suggested is co-operation and mutual respect  and understanding between the government agencies and the media
 - The media should not glorify acts of terror as they glorified the SLA  during the Hearst kidnapping
 - The media should refrain from sensational and panicky headlines, from  inflammatory catchwords, and from needless repletion of photos from bloody  scenes
 - Terrorism should be explicitly condemned for its brutality and violent,  indiscriminate nature, as the Israeli media on the whole condemn terror
 - The media must not pay or be paid for covering terrorist incidents
 - The media are advised not to take upon themselves to mediate between the  terrorists and the government. Special qualifications are required before one  assumes such a responsibility upon oneself. Journalists are there to cover the  event, not to become part of it
 - The media are expected to refrain from making dangerous speculations  about the terrorists' plans, government response, hostages' messages, and other  matters. Speculations might hinder crisis management
 - Media professionals should have background information about the  terrorists they are required to cover. They should do research prior to their  coverage. We should learn from the Hanafi incident, which luckily did not end  with the murder of a hostage just because one reporter was ill-informed and did  not do his homework as he should have
 - The media should not broadcast live terrorist incidents that include  hostage taking. This is in order not to jeopardize human life and not to impede  a government's attempts to rescue the hijacked. This is not to say that the  media should not cover such incidents. Rather, there should be a delay of a few  minutes during which an experienced editor inspects the coverage and authorizes  what should be on air and what should not, as was the case when hostages were  released from the Iranian embassy in London in 1980
 - The media are advised not to interview terrorists while the terrorist  incident is still in motion. Lines of communications between the authorities and  the terrorists should be left open. The media should not impede the negotiations  process, as they did in the Hanafi takeover in Washington
 - The media should not co-operate with terrorists who stage events. The  BBC's decision not to broadcast the spectacle in Carrickmore was right
 - The media are required to show sensitivity to the victims and to their  loved ones. This critical guideline should be observed during terrorist  incidents and, no less importantly, also after their conclusion
 - The media are expected not to report details that might harm victims'  families
 - The area in which the terrorist incident takes place should not be open  for anybody who testifies that he or she is a journalist. Only senior and  experienced reporters should be allowed in. Junior and inexperienced reporters  should undergo a learning process during which they fathom the complexities  involved. Adequate training is a necessary precondition
Media Coverage of Acts of Terrorism: Troubling Episodes and Suggested  Guidelines 2005
 (20 pages + 8 pages of notes and references)
 Preliminaries
 Troubling episodes
 Endangering life
 Hindering governmenti activities
 Glorifying terrorists
 Sensational coverage
 Irresponsible terminology
 Co-operation with terrorists and payment for interviews
 Irresponsible mediation
 Dangerous speculations
 Lack of homework and live interviews during crisis
 Live coverage
 Staging events
 Conclusion
 
9 comments:
Ciao,
I don't have time enough to read the entire paper (at least, not today!) but I do think that media have a huge responsibility.
I agree with the author: Media professionals should have background information about the terrorists they are required to cover .
Usually media professionals do not have the above mentioned background and they seem more interested in reporting improper details or in advertising the last "Osama's video".
Neither they are aware about the potential consequences of their coverage, nor they pay attention to victim's families.
it's worth reading the whole paper
i think that universities of journalism should spend long time teaching ethics and consequences of journalism
Freedom of press,
as long as medias don't lie or hide facts intentionally to give a distorted view of the facts.
Controlling the media is another form of terrorism.
What would the next step be? Maybe hiding information about the situation of the palestinians? Just wondering !
No mr Professor Cohen keep your hands off our medias. this is my personal "advise" to you; if you like.
i think that in his paper, freedom of press is not the point.
The point is "during extraordinary events, is it wise releasing information that help terrorists?"
hint: we can talk about freedom of press because we are free and safe at home. If one of your family was hostage of terrorists, would you think it's wise when a journalist releases information that help the hostage-taker?
If a journalist wants to blame the government, why doens't he/she wait for the end of the extraordinary event? maybe because afterwards they wouldn't sell many copies, would they?
haha yeah sure that's how they start it
A couple of months ago, the famous journalist Piero Ottone wrote that we should stop talking about terrorists, because what they want is exactly to get the media attention and, through this, scare people.
What do you think?
Read this....
http://ilcomunicatore.wordpress.com/2007/07/10/media-e-terrorismo/
simone
ilcomunicatore
I read your post but you know that in democracy being silent about terrorism is impossible: everyday there's a "war" about audience.
Let's say you are the editor of an important newspaper (or manager of a tv news), what would you do? You wouldn't cover terrorism, would you?
1) You don't cover terrorism
2) Other newspapers do cover terrorism
3) They make money, you don't
4) The owner tells you "cover it, otherwise you'll be fired!"
Thank you, Fabrizio, for publicizing my paper. As you gathered, I am a friend of the media, and an advocate of freedom of expression. However, I do believe in ethics, responsibility, and boundaries, otherwise the result might be anarchy.
For further deliberation, see my books: Speech, Media and Ethics
(2005), and the Scope of Tolerance (2006).
Best wishes
Raphael Cohen-Almagor
Everything is very open with a really clear description of the challenges.
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