Consigli per i giornalisti in esilio
Ven 19 aprile 2024
11:00 - 11:50
Gratuito
Calcolo distanza...
Overlapping and ongoing global press freedom crises over the past several years have forced record numbers of journalists and media workers into exile. From Pakistan to Germany, and the U.S. to Kenya, the scale of need has climbed so high that CPJ recorded a 227 percent increase in the amount of exile support between 2020 and 2023, as journalists in entrenched repressive regimes, as well as those who face fresh threats, have fled for their lives. But after the initial crisis period, new safety challenges for journalists emerge, notably mental health concerns, as journalists grapple with settling into their new lives in exile often while trying to continue reporting on their home country.
In this panel, we’ll highlight CPJ’s innovative approach to supporting the mental health of exiled journalists through a series of workshops that have brought disparate colleagues back together in person, and will hear from journalists themselves about best practices for taking care of their mental health. This panel will provide practical information as well as a sense of community building and connection, and will examine examples of success and consider remaining gaps and challenges, including the pressing need for emergency visas and safe refuge.
Organised in association with Committee to Protect Journalists.
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi
Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi
Catalina Cortés
Catalina Cortés is Journalist Assistance Coordinator of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), overseeing all of the assistance work of the Emergencies team. Catalina has more than 15 years of experience providing humanitarian and emergency assistance to journalists in crisis. Prior to joining CPJ in 2019, she was Senior Programme Officer for Safety and the Americas at the London-based Rory Peck Trust, managing the organization’s training and operations in support of freelance journalists in distress. A native Spanish speaker, Catalina studied law and holds a master’s in International Politics and Human Rights from City University in London.
Maria Epifanova
Maria Epifanova is a co-founder and CEO of Novaya Gazeta Europe.
Matt Kasper
Matt Kasper is co-director of Vereinigung für die Demokratie (VD), the Berlin-based NGO that manages Meydan TV, Azerbaijan’s largest online and independent news outlet, and ROMB, an independent Russian media outlet inhabiting the intersection of journalism and documentary filmmaking.
Aye Chan Naing
Aye Chan Naing is co-founder, chief editor, and executive director of the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), an independent broadcast media group in Myanmar. He was key to DVB’s establishment in Oslo, Norway, in 1992 on shortwave radio to broadcast independent news, pioneering Myanmar’s exile media movement in which underground in-country reporters generated and disseminated news that was impossible to publish from inside the then-military-ruled country. Myanmar’s independent media, including DVB, came under renewed threat in February 2021, when the military seized power from the country’s elected government, imposed emergency rule and cracked down on the press. The military has since blocked TV stations, disrupted internet services, banned news organizations and arrested dozens of journalists, including three from DVB. Many have gone into hiding or fled the country altogether due to fear of state reprisal for their critical news coverage. Although DVB was knocked off the air direct...