Keywords
freedom of the press, international human rights law, safety, impunity, transitional justice, truth, reparations
Abstract
The overwhelming majority of digital and physical attacks on journalists are done with impunity. This results in lower-quality journalism, less scrutiny of government, and less healthy societies and democracies. The international human rights law concept of transitional justice could bolster collective will and inform legal mechanisms to combat such impunity. Judges and investigators in several recent cases of attacks on journalists have invoked transitional justice concepts, including truth-telling, criminal investigations and prosecutions, reparations, and institutional reforms to guarantee non-recurrence. These mechanisms should be fully implemented to protect journalism at local, national, and international levels.
Original Publication Citation
Carter, E. L. (2023). The Future of International Law Freedom of Journalism: A Transitional Justice Framework. Chi. J. Int'l L., 24, 71.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Carter, Edward L., "The Future of International Law Freedom of Journalism: A Transitional Justice Framework" (2023). Faculty Publications. 7089.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/7089
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2023-07-01
Publisher
University of Chicago Law School (Journal of International Law)
Language
English
College
Fine Arts and Communications
Department
Communications
Copyright Use Information
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