SLAPPstick: come affrontare le cause legali temerarie
Ven 19 aprile 2024
15:00 - 15:50
Gratuito
Calcolo distanza...
SLAPPs continue to be a major challenge for newsrooms pursuing investigative journalism, particularly smaller, independent newsrooms with limited resources. SLAPP stands for Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation and it is an abusive litigation filed by powerful individuals aimed at silencing and intimidating legitimate watchdog journalism. In this panel, representatives for three European independent media organizations present their experiences dealing with SLAPPs, giving practical advice on what they learned in countering them, attesting their impact on the newsroom (financial, chilling effect, workload, etc) and discussing what needs to change in EU and national laws to better protect journalists from frivolous lawsuits. Moderated by Karl van den Broeck.
Organised in association with Apache.
Modificato più di un mese fa
Pagine coinvolte
Hotel Brufani
Dal 1884 il Sina Brufani è l'unico hotel 5 stelle lusso che domina il centro storico di Perugia con la sua vista panoramica sulle verdi valli dell'Umbria.
Cecilia Anesi
Cecilia Anesi è una giornalista freelance e cofondatrice dell'Investigative Reporting Project Italy (IRPI), un centro di giornalismo investigativo che ha sede in Italia e che appartiene al Global Investigative Journalism Network e all’OCCRP Network. Dopo essersi diplomata al Collegio del Mondo Unito dell’Adriatico a Duino (TS), si è laureata in Giornalismo e Sociologia alla City University di Londra. Nel 2011 ha codiretto Toxic Europe, documentario di inchiesta che ha vinto il Premio Best International Organised Crime Report 2011 ed è stato candidato al Data Journalism Award 2012. Cecilia Anesi lavora in squadra a inchieste sulle mafie italiane a livello transnazionale. Come IRPI, ha pubblicato su finanza, frodi, corruzione, crimini ambientali e riciclaggio, esponendo i criminali tramite un approccio glocal all'inchiesta. I suoi lavori sulle mafie hanno toccato Africa, Germania, Inghilterra, Nord Europa e America Latina, venendo pubblicati su media locali, nazionali e internazionali.
Mathias Destal
Mathias Destal is co-founder and editor-in-chief of Disclose. He entered investigative journalism ten years ago, first at the weekly Marianne, where he worked on political financing, then on the French far right. He is co-author of the investigative book Marine est au fait de tout... (Flammarion, 2017) and the documentary Front National: les hommes de l'ombre (Envoyé Spécial). Before embarking on the creation of Disclose, he contributed to several national media, including Canard Enchaîné, Journal du Dimanche (old version) and Arte.
Nikolas Leontopoulos
Nikolas Leontopoulos is an investigative journalist based in Athens, Greece. He is a co-founder of Investigate Europe (IE), a consortium of European journalists publishing with media partners across Europe, and worked as IE’s reporter in Greece until 2019 when he co-launched Reporters United, a network of reporters aiming to support investigative journalism in Greece, collaborate in cross-border investigations with international journalists and media, and publish stories that often struggle to find their place in the Greek press.
Karl van den Broeck
Karl van den Broeck is editor-in-chief of Apache. Culture (especially literature), politics and history are his passions. In between, he curates exhibitions and wrote a book about the real father of the pill. Since 2014 he has coordinated a debate platform at BOZAR. In 2001 he won the Vacancy Press Award. In 2017, he received the Ark Prize for Free Word on behalf of the editorial staff of Apache.