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2015, New Mandala
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4 pages
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This article discusses the current state of censorship in Myanmar as the country approaches an election, highlighting both the historical context and contemporary challenges faced by journalists. While there have been significant improvements in media freedom since 2011, the landscape remains fraught with risks, including governmental retribution and pressures from nationalist groups. The repercussions of these threats have led to self-censorship among reporters, illustrating a complex interplay between emerging freedoms and enduring restrictions on free expression.
Ma s t e r Co u r s e I n t e r n a t i o n a l Me d i a S t u d i e s ( M. A . ) Ma s t e r e s i s s u b mi t t e d i n p a r t i a l f u l ⇢ l me n t t o t h e De g r e e Ma s t e r o f A r t s
Asia Pacific Media Educator
Press freedom in Europe is facing a widespread and growing threat by “soft” censorship that includes governments’ use of financial power to pressure news media, punish critical reporting and reward favourable coverage. While Europe’s press is not generally threatened by the jailing of journalists or the closure of media outlets, “soft” censorship is a more subtle but a signifi cant new danger - noted in 2014 the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) when a report on soft censorship practices in the Hungarian media was released. The report produced by Mertek Media Monitor in collaboration with WAN-IFRA and CIMA (Center for International Media Assistance) concluded that state infl uence over Hungarian media is unfolding “slowly but surely” and has accelerated under the current government. Among the most important key fi ndings, the report mentioned that the allocation of state advertising spending is opaque and unfair; it is based on the political leanings of particular media outlets, and this distorts market competition signifi cantly. The state’s biased advertising spending infl uences editorial policies in an indirect way, creating a newsroom atmosphere in which editors accept and journalists practice self-censorship. Market competition among media agencies is clearly distorted by the biased award of state contracts. The report detailed that the legal regulations and fi nancial practices of Hungary’s current public-media financing permit improper state influence over public media and fail to comply with European Commission requirements regarding state support for public-service media. This new report produced by Mertek Media Monitor thanks to the generous funding of Fritt Ord and Open Society Foundations, aims to track the changes which occurred during 2014, highlight the main new trends and analyse their effects on the press freedom situation of the country.
In the wake of these general elections, what is it about T urkey’s media culture that it undergirds the formation of a society so divided, that people seem to inhabit parallel realities?
In Meryl Aldridge and Nicholas Hewitt, (Eds.), Controlling Broadcasting: Access Policy and Practice in North America and Europe, Manchester University Press, 1994, 93-107. , 1994
The 1992 US presidential election stood out as one where opinion polls suggested an unprecedented level of voter dissatisfaction with politics-as- usual. Polls showed disenchantment with both parties and with all the so-called "major candidates." Voters expressed the wish that other candidates had entered the race. The press dutifully reported on these polls. But a truly responsive democratic press would go further. It would widen the spotlight beyond the centre-stage that is the subject of public discontent. The t992 election was also the first to follow the revolutions in Eastern Europe that swept traditional leadership aside and brought to power those who had once inhabited the political margins, even jail cells. The US press generally applauded these changes and saw them as movements toward ‘our way of life’. Yet there is little indication that the US press is willing to expand US democracy by widening its coverage, even now that the claimed threat that drove much US foreign policy and pervaded the image of the world presented by much US journalism has vanished.
2016
Media censorship is a global phenomenon that has foreshadowed information outlets for centuries. A common ground for censorship is maintenance of an orderly state, whereas, the underlying motive is to keep public ignorant of the information that can potentially threaten authorities. The worldwide Internet connectivity in the contemporary era allows information to pass through within and beyond borders in minimal time; therefore, increasing number of media consumers depend on the Internet for a wide variety of information. Historically, the access to news has not been this easy; the press in most of Europe in the 18 th century was under the draconian reins of censorship, which gradually abated by the 19 th century due to public demand. However, autocratic and heavily centralized governments still openly or subtly employ censorship as a tool to silence government opposition. To combat information coup, tech savvy journalists and independent reporters channel information through social...
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