The Companion is the first collection to bring together two distinct ways of thinking about human rights and media: scholarship examining media as a human right and essays examining media coverage of human rights issues.
Howard Tumber is Professor of Journalism and Communication at City, University of London, UK. He is the founder and Co-Editor-in-Chief of Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism. He has published widely in the field of the sociology of news and journalism.
Silvio Waisbord is Professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University, USA. He is the Editor-in-Chief of The Journal of Communication, and he has published widely about news, politics, and social change.
1 Mapping the Field: Media and Human Rights
Part 1
Communication, Expression and Human Rights
2 UNESCO's evolving perspectives on the media and human rights
3 History of Media and Human Rights
4 Media freedom of expression at the Strasbourg Court: Current predictability of the standard of protection offered
5 Communication freedoms versus communication rights: Discursive and Normative struggles within Civil Society and Beyond
6 Freedom of Information and the Media
7 Freedom of Expression and the Chilling Effect
8 Human Rights and Press Law
9 Human rights and the digital
10 Children's rights in the digital age
11 Media and Information Literacy (MIL): Taking the digital social turn for online freedoms and education 3.0
12 Digital Media Practices, Systems, and Rights
13 All human rights are local. The resiliency of social change.
Part 2
Media Performance and Human Rights: Political Processes
14 Political determinants of media freedom
15 Beyond the binary of universalism and relativism: Iran, media and the discourse of human rights
16 Rights, reporting and mass-surveillance in a digital age
17 Civil society and political-intelligence elites: From manipulation to public accountability
18 Foreign policy, media and human rights
19 Public diplomacy, media, and human rights
Part 3
Media Performance and Human Rights: News and Journalism
20 Global media ethics, human rights and flourishing
21 Investigative journalism and human rights
22 International reporting
23 Global violence against journalists: The power of impunity and emerging initiatives to evoke social change
24 Media, human rights and civic organizations
25 Rights and responsibilities when using user-generated content to report
crisis events
26 Environmental Activism, Journalism and the 'New War'
Part 4
Digital Activism, Witnessing and Human Rights
27 Social media and human rights advocacy
28 All the world's a stage: The rise of transnational celebrity advocacy for human rights
29 Social media reinvigorates disability rights activism globally
30 Media and LGBT advocacy: Visibility and transnationalism in a digital age
31 Live-witnessing, slacktivism, and surveillance: Understanding the opportunities, challenges, and risks of human rights activism in a digital era
32 Human rights and the media/protest assemblage
33 Imaging human rights: On the ethical and political implications of picturing pain
34 Citizen Witnessing of Human Rights Abuses
35 Video and witnessing at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia
36 Media, human rights and digital affordances
Part 5
Media Representation of Human Rights: Cultural, Social, and Political
37 Media, culture, and human rights: Towards an intercultural communication and Human Rights Journalism nexus
38 Media and women's human rights
39 News Coverage of female genital cutting: A seven country comparative study
40 Media, human rights and religion
41 The Role of News Media in Fostering Children's Democratic Citizenship
42 News language and human rights: audiences and outsiders
43 Media, Human Rights and Political Discourse
44 Media, Human Rights and Refugees
45 Labor journalism, human rights and social change
46 Media, Public Safety, and Human Rights
47 Prisoners, Human Rights and the Media
48 Changes in War-Making, Media and Human Rights: Revolution or Repackaging?
49 Media, Terrorism, and Freedom of Expression