ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Media and Human Rights offers a comprehensive and contemporary survey of the key themes, approaches and debates in the field of media and human rights.

The Companion is the first collection to bring together two distinct ways of thinking about human rights and media, including scholarship that examines media as a human right alongside that which looks at media coverage of human rights issues. This international collection of 49 newly written pieces thus provides a unique overview of current research in the field, while also providing historical context to help students and scholars appreciate how such developments depart from past practices.

The volume examines the universal principals of freedom of expression, legal instruments, the right to know, media as a human right, and the role of media organisations and journalistic work. It is organised thematically in five parts:

  • Communication, Expression and Human Rights

  • Media Performance and Human Rights: Political Processes

  • Media Performance and Human Rights: News and Journalism

  • Digital Activism, Witnessing and Human Rights

  • Media Representation of Human Rights: Cultural, Social and Political.

Individual essays cover an array of topics, including mass-surveillance, LGBT advocacy, press law, freedom of information and children’s rights in the digital age. With contributions from both leading scholars and emerging scholars, the Companion offers an interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approach to media and human rights allowing for international comparisons and varying perspectives.

The Routledge Companion to Media and Human Rights provides a comprehensive introduction to the current field useful for both students and researchers, and defines the agenda for future research.

chapter |14 pages

media and human rights

ByHoward Tumber, Silvio Waisbord

part |132 pages

Communication, expression and human rights

chapter |13 pages

Expressing the changes

International perspectives on evolutions in the right to free expression
ByGuy Berger

chapter |9 pages

History of Media and Human Rights

ByMark Hampton, Diana Lemberg

chapter |11 pages

Media freedom of expression at the Strasbourg Court

Current predictability of the standard of protection offered
ByHelen Fenwick

chapter |10 pages

Communication Freedoms versus Communication Rights

Discursive and normative struggles within civil society and beyond
ByBart Cammaerts

chapter |13 pages

Freedom of Information and the Media

ByBen Worthy

chapter |10 pages

Freedom of Expression and the Chilling Effect

ByJudith Townend

chapter |12 pages

Human Rights 
and Press Law

ByJulian Petley

chapter |9 pages

Human rights and the digital

ByKari Karppinen

chapter |10 pages

Children’s Rights in the Digital Age

BySonia Livingstone

chapter |12 pages

Media and Information Literacy (MIL)

ByDivina Frau-Meigs

chapter |10 pages

Theorising digital media cultures

The politics of watching and being watched
ByGavin J.D. Smith

chapter |11 pages

All Human Rights are Local

ByJan Servaes

part |61 pages

Media performance and human rights

chapter |9 pages

Political Determinants of Media Freedom

BySebastian Stier

chapter 15|11 pages

Beyond the Binary of Universalism and Relativism

ByMehdi Semati

chapter |10 pages

Rights, Media and 
Mass-surveillance 
in a Digital Age

ByEmma L. Briant

chapter |10 pages

Civil Society and 
Political-Intelligence Elites

From manipulation to public accountability
ByVian Bakir

chapter |9 pages

Foreign Policy, Media and Human Rights

ByEkaterina Balabanova

chapter |10 pages

Public Diplomacy, Media and Human Rights

ByAmelia H. Arsenault

part III|68 pages

Media performance and human rights

chapter |9 pages

Global Media Ethics, Human Rights and Flourishing

ByStephen J. A. Ward

chapter |9 pages

Investigative Journalism and Human Rights

ByMichael Bromley

chapter |9 pages

International Reporting

ByGiovanna Dell’Orto

chapter |10 pages

Global Violence Against Journalists

The power of impunity and emerging initiatives to evoke social change
ByJeannine E. Relly, Celeste González de Bustamante

chapter |9 pages

Civic Organizations, Human Rights and the News Media

ByMatthew Powers

part IV|98 pages

Digital activism, witnessing and human rights

chapter |10 pages

Social Media and Human Rights Advocacy

ByElla McPherson

chapter |11 pages

All the World’s a Stage

The rise of transnational celebrity advocacy for human rights
ByTrevor Thrall, Dominik Stecula

chapter |9 pages

Social Media Reinvigorates Disability Rights 
Activism Globally

ByBeth A. Haller

chapter |9 pages

Media and LGBT Advocacy

Visibility and transnationalism in a digital age
ByEve Ng

chapter |9 pages

Live-witnessing, Slacktivism and Surveillance

Understanding the opportunities, challenges and risks of human rights activism in a digital era
BySummer Harlow

chapter |10 pages

Human rights and the media/protest assemblage

ByStefania Milan

chapter |10 pages

Imaging Human Rights

On the ethical and political implications of picturing pain
ByKari Andén-Papadopoulos

chapter |10 pages

Citizen Witnessing of Human Rights Abuses

ByStuart Allan

chapter |9 pages

Media, Human Rights and Forensic Science

BySteven Livingston

part V|131 pages

Media representation of human rights

chapter |10 pages

Media, Culture and Human Rights

Towards an intercultural communication and human rights journalism nexus
ByIbrahim Seaga Shaw

chapter |9 pages

Media and women’s human rights

ByBarbara M. Freeman, Silvio Waisbord

chapter |11 pages

News Coverage of Female Genital Cutting

A seven country comparative study
ByMeghan Sobel

chapter |9 pages

Media, Human Rights 
and Religion

ByJolyon Mitchell, Joshua Rey

chapter |10 pages

News language and human rights

Audiences and outsiders
ByMartin Conboy

chapter |10 pages

Media, Human Rights and Political Discourse

ByLisa Brooten

chapter |10 pages

media and human rights

ByKerry Moore

chapter |12 pages

Labour journalism, human rights and social change

ByAnya Schiffrin, Beatrice Santa-Wood

chapter |9 pages

Public Safety

BySonja Wolf

chapter |10 pages

Prisoners, Human Rights and the Media

ByPaul Mason

chapter |9 pages

Changes in War-Making, Media and Human Rights

Revolution or repackaging?
ByMelissa Wall

chapter |10 pages

Media, Terrorism and Freedom of Expression

ByBrigitte L. Nacos