Le valutazioni del rischio possono garantire maggiore sicurezza ai giornalisti?
Gio 18 aprile 2024
11:00 - 11:50
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Around the world, risks to journalists are rising while newsroom budgets are shrinking. Risk assessments are a simple and cost effective strategy that if universalized and incorporated into the assignment process can keep journalists safer. Risk assessments have gotten something of a bad rap, and understandably. No one liked the tedious forms that journalists were often required to fill out that seemed more like bureaucratic box ticking than a genuine effort to identify and mitigate threats. But a new generation of experts has revamped the approach, focusing on the relationship between editors and reporters. A risk assessment begins with a conversation about safety that can be part of every assignment, and can take many forms depending on the level of risk identified. The key is to build a partnership, develop trust, and create a culture of safety. Once the specific risk is identified there are a range of low-cost strategies developed by groups like ACOS, Freedom of the Press Foundation, the Committee to Protect Journalists and many others that can be used to mitigate threats ranging from online harassment to covering organized crime and civil unrest.
Moderated by Joel Simon.
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi
Centro Servizi Camerali Galeazzo Alessi
Carlos Dada
A pioneer of investigative reporting and online journalism in El Salvador and Latin America, Carlos Dada is the co-founder and director of digital news outlet El Faro, which is the first digital-only news outlet in Latin America. Dada and entrepreneur Jorge Simán founded El Faro in 1998 in the aftermath of El Salvador’s long civil war. Their mission was to establish a news outlet completely independent of any political influence and to defend press freedom and freedom of expression in the country. Over the decades, El Faro has become a paragon of investigative journalism in Central America with its fearless coverage of violence, corruption, inequality, and human rights violations. The news outlet’s investigations have uncovered several cases of high-level corruption in El Salvador, including cases involving former presidents Mauricio Funes and Antonio Saca. El Faro is known for its unique style of investigative reporting, which sees teams of journalists uncovering specific cases so...
Maria Salazar Ferro
Maria Salazar Ferro is the director of newsroom safety and resilience at the New York Times (NYT), where she leads a holistic, inter-departmental strategy to protect NYT journalists from online attacks. She is also president of the board of the ACOS (A Culture of Safety) Alliance and previously spent sixteen years at the Committee to Protect Journalists, most recently as the director of the Emergencies Department.
Joel Simon
Joel Simon is the founding director of the Journalism Protection Initiative at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism, part of the City University of New York. He is the author of four books, including most recently The Infodemic: How Censorship and Lies Made the World Sicker and Less Free, co-authored with Robert Mahoney. He writes regularly on press freedom issues for The New Yorker, and produces a column for Columbia Journalism Review. From 2006 until 2021, Joel served as executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. During 2022, he was Fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University and a Senior Visiting Fellow at the Knight First Amendment Institute, also at Columbia.
Aimee Wielechowski
Biography to come.