Media justice organizers at the Center for Media
Justice (CMJ) and MAG-Net have recently produced a brilliant campaign
plan ("The Campaign for universal broadband") to win three policies
crucial for just and democratic communication: network neutrality,
universal broadband and universal service fund reform. Considering the
renewed struggle required to win these goals, and to protect them
afterwards, two questions seem particularly important. First, to win
media access rights, social justice movements need media access. So,
how do we get the kind of access that can allow us to succeed? Second,
as net neutrality and universal broadband are not ends in themselves,
but rather the means to enable a just and democratic media system, who
should produce that system? Open access to a media system controlled by
the status quo will not provide the necessary means for disadvantaged
communities and social justice movements to change power relations.
To win and protect the three central policies of the
MAG-Net plan, media justice movements must have allies at radio and TV
stations - the leading sources of news for most people, especially
those without the Internet (Pew Center for People and the Press).
Mainstream commercial channels will not provide that access as they are
also agents defending corporate power and driving social justice
movements to the margins. So, what about public media? The problem is
that too often public broadcasting outlets have boards populated by
elite and corporate representatives, who historically have used their
power to filter out the very perspectives we seek to extend. However, a
movement of active publics could restructure governance at public media
and demand democratically elected boards. This change could enable
representatives from diverse communities to make decisions about
programming and provide new access for marginalized and oppressed
social groups to shape and produce content, self-organize and build
just social relationships.
So, like network neutrality and universal broadband,
should social justice movements also consider control over public media
to be a racial and economic justice issue? In the effort to constitute
a just and a ubiquitous public media system, should a high priority be
to demand direct, democratic community governance of publicly funded
outlets, especially local NPR and PBS affiliates? Though flawed, badly
funded and commercialized, CPB outlets are the material of an existing
system that could - if under community control - be a new means for
self-organization by diverse publics.
What do you think the priority is or should be for
synergizing isolated community print, online, radio, PEG and other
media producers into a new public system - creating a publicly
controlled, radically reorganized, public media system that could
enable social justice movements to change social conditions?
There are excellent reasons to conceive of network
neutrality as a social justice issue. The Center for Media Justice made
particularly important contributions to this understanding with their
document "Network Neutrality, Universal Broadband, and Racial Justice," as did CMJ's Malkia Cyril and co-authors Joseph Torres and Chris Rabb with their statement, "The Internet Must Not Become a Segregated Community."
Both works powerfully clarify that the Internet system envisioned by
corporate and state officials would create first- and second-class
Netizens. As the net neutrality struggle continues to demonstrate,
diverse publics must communicate and act on their own behalf to
establish and preserve a policy for digital technology based on equal
access.
However, marginalized communities must not hope that
a neutral Internet will build a media system to meet their needs. It is
time to give up any remaining illusions of technological determinism.
There is no political orientation inherent in technology - not even a
neutral digital network. Only the creative labor of our communities and
our movements can produce the spaces we need to collaboratively create
new understandings of ourselves and our purposes; to communicate,
coordinate and act. Lacking creative action by our communities and
movements, universal broadband would only enable widespread access to a
system dominated by the same corporate and racist forces that dominate
the current system. After all, war and injustice continue irrespective
of Facebook, Twitter and Digg. Though perhaps it seems obvious, it is
crucial to remember that it was primarily the culture of the producers
- not the users - that shaped the Internet medium (Castells, The
Internet Galaxy, 2003).
Historically marginalized communities now, at this
crucial juncture, could wield power as producers to shape the Internet
into a new media network to increase equity in media access and
political participation. Movements for media justice could struggle to
develop the Internet as a platform where marginalized communities can
speak to themselves and to wider audiences.
As the CMJ's statements on network neutrality and
universal broadband remind us, social justice movements cannot simply
trust professionals employed by either corporations or the state to
decide which social groups get broadband access or what digital content
we can access once online. That same critical logic applies to control
over public media and public news production. Unfortunately, it is
evident that professional journalists and their allies are organizing
to create a revitalized public media system that they, state officials
and corporate, elite, station trustees will largely control with little
or no role for historically marginalized communities as decision makers
or as content producers.
Professional news models of production are
collapsing - or rather transforming. Professional journalists
themselves are engaged in a desperate struggle to maintain their social
position as elite interpreters of daily life through controlling access
to the occupation of reporting. As professional journalists seek to
reconstruct their gatekeeping authority over online news production,
they are also rebuilding barriers to access that historically excluded
people of color, the poor and working classes, political dissidents,
LGBT communities, and other groups. In short, virtually every emerging
model to "save journalism" presented by commercial - and public - media
professionals (as well as some academics) reproduces old hierarchies
that exclude disadvantaged communities from decision making.
For example, in December of 2009, the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) held a workshop deep within the beltway titled "How
Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age?" These meetings attempted to
make sure that journalism's future will be market based. Of course,
when market forces shape news production they inevitably shape the
content and the political meaning of news. Renowned journalist Edward
R. Murrow acknowledged as much when he warned, if "news
is to be regarded as a commodity, only acceptable when saleable, then I
don't care what you call it - I say it isn't news" (Speech to the
Radio and Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) convention,
Chicago, 10/15/1958). Murrow's concern over corporate influence on news
did not seem to be shared by the many FTC participants, who, instead,
struggled to find ways that the government could help shore up the
declining commodity value of news.
Even a workshop panel that explored noncommercial
options, "Public- and Foundation-Funded Journalism," (starts at about
the 1:18:00 mark here; transcript starts at page 23 here)
raised little criticism of corporate influence on news production.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the panel also displayed some of the same
exclusions that media activists have critiqued for years, namely a lack
of diversity: seven white men, two white women, and one male of color.
This translates to 90 percent white, 80 percent male. Lacking
representatives from disenfranchised communities, and entertaining no
questions from the audience, there was almost no consideration of the
issues important to historically marginalized social groups. It was
almost as if the panelists had never read the Carnegie Commission
report that founded public broadcasting and were unaware of the central
role it defined for such groups. The Carnegie report called for a
system that will "bring into the home" people's "protests"; "provide a
voice for groups in the community that may otherwise be unheard";
"increase our understanding of the world, of other nations and
cultures, of the whole commonwealth of man"; and "help us to see
America whole, in all its diversity."
This is not to say that the word "diversity" was
missing from their vocabularies, but that they used the word in
restricted ways. The panelists did support a greater diversity of
audiences and content. Panelists also advocated for "technological
diversity" and the need for government money to fund it, as well as the
need for new productive relationships with software developers. But
never did they consider the possibility that the diverse communities
they view as audiences also have a legitimate role to play making
decisions about public media. Nor did panelists consider opening up new
productive relationships - and, thus, career paths - to historically
marginalized communities.
There was a little critical discussion about the
influence of powerful commercial or state funders, but there was
virtually no discussion about the difficulty of making journalism
accountable to diverse publics. Instead, some of the most powerful
representatives of journalism on the panel argued that the old system
simply "worked," and all that's needed is more public money for
journalists and technology. The best kind of accountability, they
claimed, was for journalists to govern themselves using professional
ethics and a strong "firewall" between the newsroom and funding.
To most of us, a firewall is that impenetrable metal
barrier that protects the driver and passengers in a car from a
conflagration in the engine compartment. There is no such physical
divide when it comes to news production, as evidenced by decades of
academic research, the work of groups such as Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting and common experience. Instead of the mythical firewall, a
more honest depiction should acknowledge a historic and ongoing social
struggle among publishers, journalists, designers, and powerful sources
to shape the news to their own vision. Lacking power, disadvantaged
communities are largely excluded from this struggle.
Panelist Jon McTaggart, the senior vice president
& COO of American Public Media (producer of NPR's MarketPlace),
said, "I think that any serious news organization has a fire wall in
place where organizational funding is certainly distinct from the
activities of the journalists themselves."
NPR President and CEO Vivian Schiller went farther
and argued that firewalls truly do provide genuine accountability:
"Advertising subsidizes the newspaper and all commercial media. You
know, does that mean that newspapers have pulled their punches about
those advertisers? Certainly not." Astoundingly, she even claimed that
there has never been "any instance in the history, at least, of NPR
where a story has been slanted or, you know, favorable to a foundation
funder."
Eric Newton, vice president of the journalism
program at the Knight Foundation, also argued that the old system
successfully held commercial news media accountable. "It's about
professional ethics. And one of the great things about the commercial
newspaper industry is how many hundreds of major newspapers have
fantastic codes of ethics that they do hold each other accountable for
and the professional organizations and journalism schools do hold them
accountable." He even made false and misleading claims that libraries
and schools rely on professional ethics and self-governance to be
accountable to their communities. Citizens in voting booths looking at
their ballots may disagree. Publicly elected boards often govern public
libraries and schools.
Even Josh Silver, executive director of Free Press,
did little to challenge the clearly self-serving assertions raised by
news producers and industry representatives, but, instead, reinforced
their frames and ideas. For example, his statement, "we have to know
that the firewall is rock-solid" accepts that firewalls could actually
be "rock-solid," that professional ethics and best practices could
truly be a concrete substitute for public participation. Other
statements he made further reinforced a conceptual division between
expert professionals and the public, this time casting the FTC
participants as legitimate decision makers over community needs: "[W]e
need to figure out ... what do communities really need" so that "we"
can "really engage the public." Who is this "we" that stands apart from
the public, yet decides what that public truly needs?
As the only representative from a media activism
movement on the panel, Silver should have defended public participation
in the public media system. Instead, Silver's only suggestions for
"structural change" were for better ombudsmen, a different appointment
process for CPB board members and an abandonment of the appropriations
process. But as none of these ideas expose professionals or officials
to any meaningful consequences from diverse publics, these ideas would
in fact continue to structure public media as a domain of elite
control. These changes would, he said, help to insulate public media
from too much politics - and on this point he has it all upside down.
After all, limiting decision making over public media to officials and
insiders is to ensure that it is their political culture that will
shape the medium. Should not media justice and democracy activists
instead increasingly expose public media to the politics of economic
and racial justice and democratic participation?
We need a media system that is partial to justice
and the health of our communities. The media justice community and its
allies need to critically analyze proposals to remake public media -
most importantly those from the Knight Foundation and from Schudson and
Downie. Despite the claims of media professionals, industry reps, and
some academics, we cannot leave the development of public media to
their expertise alone. Professional journalists, corporations, and
state officials seem poised to produce a system that represents the
relationships they need - not what marginalized communities and social
justice movements need. They will give us a marketplace of their ideas
and call it just.
(This article was published 4/12/10 as an op-ed at the Editor & Publisher web site.)
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