Digital Media Law Project Announces a New Survey of Media Credentialing Practices
The Digital Media Law Project at Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, together with the Investigative News Network,
the National Press Photographers Association, Free Press, Journalist’s
Resource, and the Nieman Journalism Lab, is pleased to announce the
launch of a new study on media credentialing. We invite newsgatherers of all types to participate.
Even as the very concept of journalism evolves to accommodate dramatic
new ways of gathering and interacting with information of critical
public importance, the idea of media credentials remains deeply embedded in the practice of journalism in the United States. Dozens of laws at
both the state and federal levels condition the right to engage in
newsgathering activity on the receipt of credentials; police departments use press identification to separate journalists from protestors
subject to arrest; and political parties limit access to vital aspects
of the democratic process to those approved by campaigns. And yet,
systemic understanding of credentialing practices and standards is very
poor, with public attention normally being limited to discrete issues as they arise.
“In many ways, newsgathering rights in the United States are a structure built on shifting sands,” said Jeff Hermes, director of the Digital
Media Law Project. “It is crucial for the future of journalism that we
learn more about how these rights are allocated by those who control
access.”
The new study is designed to develop a nationwide overview of
credentialing practices over the last five years, in order to identify
emerging norms and systemic issues in how credentials are used by
government entities and private organizations to control newsgathering
activity. The core of the study is an online survey that asks
journalists and others who gather and report information of public
importance to provide information about their experiences in applying
for and obtaining media credentials from federal, state, and private
entities in the United States. The survey will generate data that can be made available to the public, be used as a platform for further study,
and form a basis for developing measures to improve conditions for
journalism as a whole.
We welcome participation in the survey from all who consider themselves
to be involved in gathering news for publication, including professional and citizen journalists, activists who publish news content as part of
their activism, and independent bloggers who write about current events. If that sounds like you, you can take the survey at http://www.dmlp.org/survey. We hope you will join with us in this
effort!
CONTACT:
Jeffrey Hermes, Esq.
Director, Digital Media Law Project @ Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society
E-mail: staff@dmlp.org
Tel: (617) 495-7547
(Image courtesy of Flickr user Bill Couch pursuant to a Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 license.)