Document details

Independent Journalism in Contexts of Shrinking Civic Space: Challenges and Strategies of Media Resisting Shrinking Civic Space in Europe

Amsterdam: Free Press Unlimited (2021), 51 pp.

Contains illustrations, bibliogr. p. 50

"In this study, we explore the challenges and strategies of independent media outlets in contexts of shrinking civic space. To this end, we present five case studies on a specific media outlets. These describe the overall political context for the media, the specific challenges that the respective media outlet has faced, as well as the different strategies that they have used to meet these challenges. The overall problem is situated within a set of concepts introduced in the first chapter, while the conclusions chapter brings together the lessons which can be learned from the case studies in one framework. The five case studies each have a distinct focus, namely: the efforts of Átlátszo in Hungary to reach groups in society who are currently not exposed to independent media content; the lessons KRIK in Serbia learned on how to anticipate and counter attempts by powerholders to repress their story, including through cross-border collaboration; the thin line between activism and journalism that Liber in Teleorman in Romania threaded, while investigating power abuse by national politicians at the local level; the focus on professional standards and community engagement by Oštro, in their attempt to build credibility towards an audience used to partisan media; the position of Átlátszo Erdély, a Hungarian-language media outlet in Romania stuck between pressures from multiple sides, who as a city-based media outlet managed to embed themselves in a rural audience." (Executive summary)
Executive summary, 4
Independent journalism in contexts of shrinking civic space, 5
Case 1: A tale of many towns: how a Hungarian watchdog NGO widens its outreach / Eva Bognar and Robert Nemeth, 11
Case 2: Story ex machina: turning an attack into a gain [KRIK, Serbia] / Bojana Kostic, 19
Case 3: Political scandal and the use of provocation as a tool for journalists: the case of small local media taking on political leaders in Romania / Dumitrita Holdis, 27
Case 4: Oštro: Continuous learning in Slovenia’s Center for Investigative Journalism / Romana Biljak Gerjevic, 32
Case 5: Institutionalizing progressive media in Transylvania: the case of Átlátszo Erdély / Dumitrita Holdis, 38
Conclusions Section 1: All audiences have access to independent media, 43
Conclusions Section 2: Independent media are seen as credible, 44
Conclusions Section 3: Independent media hold powerholders to account, 46