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THE COMMISSION ON FREEDOM OF THE PRESS

THE COMMISSION ON FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. known as the Hutchins’ Commission. Reason for concern. Worries about large amount of concentration in mass media ownership Was press operating in the best public interest?. HUTCHINS COMMISSION.

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THE COMMISSION ON FREEDOM OF THE PRESS

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  1. THE COMMISSION ON FREEDOM OF THE PRESS known as the Hutchins’ Commission

  2. Reason for concern • Worries about large amount of concentration in mass media ownership • Was press operating in the best public interest?

  3. HUTCHINS COMMISSION • Citizens group (academics, civic and religious leaders) NOT press people • Report issued in late 1940s • More than 50 years later, the current “civic” or “public” journalism movement contains some of the same elements

  4. The COMMISSION ON FREEDOM OF THE PRESS • After several years of work, the Commission issued a report that set forth a code of social responsibility for the press, requiring these five basic services :

  5. a free press will provide • a truthful, comprehensive, and intelligent account of the day’s events in a context which gives them meaning; • a forum for the exchange of comment and criticism; • the projection of a representative picture of the constituent groups in the society; • the presentation and clarification of the goals and values of the society; • full access to the day’s intelligence.

  6. Hutchins Commission recommendations • What the gov’t can do • What the press can do • What the public can do

  7. WHAT THE GOVERNMENT CAN DO

  8. What the government can do: • give radio and movies full First Amendment rights • facilitate new ventures in the communications industry • maintain competition through antitrust laws

  9. What the government can do: • reform libel laws • repeal sedition laws • inform the public about gov’t policies and the purpose underlying those policies

  10. give radio and movies full First Amendment rights Broadcast media have most First A. rights but gov’t still regulates on grounds that airwaves belong to the public and spectrum is a limited resource. Has it happened yet?

  11. Regulation of Broadcasting • 1996 revision of federal Communications Act moved from fiduciary model to marketplace model of regulation

  12. Broadcasting Regulation • Licensing of radio/tv stations • Less frequent renewal (3 years to 8 years now) • Equal opportunity rule applies to political candidates • Candidates for federal offices must be allowed by BUY time • For state & local candidates,all must be treated equally

  13. Broadcast Regulation • Fairness Doctrine no longer being enforced • But Personal Attack Rule part of the Fairness Doctrine is still in effect.

  14. Facilitate new ventures in communi-cations industry Gov’t financed development of the Internet Has it happened yet?

  15. Maintain competition through antitrust laws Gov’t gets mixed reviews on this point. Joint operating agreements (allows limited exemption for some newspapers) 1996 Telecomm Act allows greater concentration of ownership; more cross-media ownership, mergers Has it happened yet?

  16. Reform Libel Laws False, defamatory statement now protected by 1st Amendment if not made with fault. Remedies short of court cases have not been enacted. Has it happened?

  17. Repeal sedition laws Repealed or not enforced unless expression incites immediate violent action Has it happened?

  18. inform the public about gov’t policies and the purpose underlying those policies Federal Open Records Act (1967) Federal Open Meetings Act Also on state level. Does not apply to all gov’t entities Has gov’t met recommendations?

  19. WHAT THE PRESS CAN DO

  20. Accept the responsi-bilities of common carriers Media are NOT common carriers Internet Service Providers (ISP) and telephones ARE examples of common carriers What the press can do

  21. Assume the responsibility of financing new, experimental activities in their fields. Modern printing techniques Video/Audio text Television Gov’t developed Internet What the press can do?

  22. Engage in vigorous mutual criticism of each other But things may be changing Journalism review magazines Some cross-media criticism What the press can do

  23. Increase the competence, independence, effectiveness of its staff Colleges, universities now teach communications courses. We hope they are effective toward this goal. What the press can do

  24. Radio industry take control of its programs and treat advertising as it is treated by the best newspapers This is true in principal today. Advertisers do not create programming as in early days of radio. What the press can do

  25. WHAT THE PUBLIC CAN DO

  26. Nonprofit institutions can help supply the variety, quantity, and quality of press service Contributions to PBS Sponsorship of public service programming Money for research and special projects (like civic journalism What the public can do

  27. Create academic-professional centers of advanced study, research, and publication in communi-cations Poynter Institute for Media Studies (St. Pete) Freedom Forum Centers Pew Charitable Trust What the public can do

  28. Existing schools of journalism should use total resources of their universities to give students broad liberal arts training To become and remain accredited, a communication curriculum must require approximately 75% of courses to be in liberal arts What the public can do

  29. Establish a new and independent agency to appraise and report annually upon the performance of the press. National News Council failed State news councils little success What can the public do?

  30. Press reaction • Rejected report in 1947; afraid of government censorship • No press representation on Hutchins Commission • Major news organizations have been uncooperative toward press councils • Press has implemented some recommendations

  31. Today--50 years later The new “civic” or “public” journalism movement contains some of the same elements first expressed in the Hutchins Commission Report. Much of the current movement isn’t new at all.

  32. THE END

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