Canaries in the coal-mine? What the killings of journalists tell us about future repression


Gohdes, Anita R. ; Carey, Sabine C.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343316680859
URL: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC54279...
Additional URL: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/002234...
Document Type: Article
Year of publication: 2017
The title of a journal, publication series: Journal of Peace Research
Volume: 54
Issue number: 2
Page range: 157-174
Place of publication: London [u.a.]
Publishing house: Sage Publications
ISSN: 0022-3433 , 1460-3578
Publication language: English
Institution: School of Social Sciences > Political Scinece, International Relations (Carey 2010-)
Außerfakultäre Einrichtungen > Mannheim Centre for European Social Research - Research Department B
Außerfakultäre Einrichtungen > Graduate School of Economic and Social Sciences- CDSS (Social Sciences)
Subject: 320 Political science
Abstract: An independent press that is free from government censorship is regarded as instrumental to ensuring human rights protection. Yet governments across the globe often target journalists when their reports seem to offend them or contradict their policies. Can the government’s infringements of the rights of journalists tell us anything about its wider human rights agenda? The killing of a journalist is a sign of deteriorating respect for human rights. If a government orders the killing of a journalist, it is willing to use extreme measures to eliminate the threat posed by the uncontrolled flow of information. If non-state actors murder journalists, it reflects insecurity, which can lead to a backlash by the government, again triggering state-sponsored repression. To test the argument whether the killing of journalists is a precursor to increasing repression, we introduce a new global dataset on killings of journalists between 2002 and 2013 that uses three different sources that track such events across the world. The new data show that mostly local journalists are targeted and that in most cases the perpetrators remain unconfirmed. Particularly in countries with limited repression, human rights conditions are likely to deteriorate in the two years following the killing of a journalist. When journalists are killed, human rights conditions are unlikely to improve where standard models of human rights would expect an improvement. Our research underlines the importance of taking the treatment of journalists seriously, not only because failure to do so endangers their lives and limits our understanding of events on the ground, but also because their physical safety is an important precursor of more repression in the future.




Dieser Eintrag ist Teil der Universitätsbibliographie.




Metadata export


Citation


+ Search Authors in

+ Page Views

Hits per month over past year

Detailed information



You have found an error? Please let us know about your desired correction here: E-Mail


Actions (login required)

Show item Show item