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A code of conduct in covering minorities
by Lorelei Mihală
European Journalism Centre & agencies
 
May 2012
 
“Gypsies are stealing,” “Politician cheats state with gypsies’ help,” “Another four Romanian gypsies invade British homes” - these are only a few headlines found in what are considered to be quality Romanian newspapers.
 
Despite the existence of codes and institutions responsible for sanctioning discriminatory remarks, such headlines against the Roma minority are not exceptional in the Romanian media.
 
Crime has no ethnicity
 
“These headlines are profoundly discriminatory,” says the journalist George Lăcătu, “because the ethnicity of the offenders is not relevant to the story.”
 
Together with four Roma colleagues, Lăcătu founded the Roma Journalists Association (RJA) in 2009.
 
“Out of the 20 minorities co-existing in Romania, only the Roma receive negative coverage in the media,” Lăcătu adds. “This gives the impression that the Roma are the only minority committing offences in Romania, while the rest of the people are the ‘nice guys’.”
 
“By continuously mentioning the ethnicity of Roma offenders the media perpetuates the stereotypes and prejudices about this group. The media also has a tendency to generalise isolated incidents over the whole Roma population.”
 
Lăcătu, who in April 2012 received the honorary award of the European Civil Rights Prize of the Sinti and Roma, works as an investigative reporter for the Romanian newspaper Evenimentul zilei.
 
In 2007, he was awarded with the grand prize of the Romanian Press Club for revealing illegal activities of the national lottery. His investigation led to the resignation of the vice-prime-minister at the time, who turned out to be involved in the affair.
 
In spite of these professional recognitions, Lăcătu says that he has been the victim of discrimination on many occasions for being a Roma.
 
Together with RJA, he is trying to fight against stereotypes and prejudices against the Roma minority in the media. The RJA also organises journalism courses for high school Roma students.
 
Prevailing stereotypes
 
A survey published at the end of 2011 by the association Pro Democratia and ActiveWatch-The Press Monitoring Agency, revealed that 43 percent of the respondents linked the predominantly negative image of the Roma in Romanian society to the way the minority group is presented in the Romanian media, while 50 percent did not hold the media accountable for it.
 
Commenting on the survey, ActiveWatch project coordinator Ionuţ Codreanu said: “Half of the respondents expressed the reality as they perceive it and do not need the press to confirm what they believe.”
 
“Unfortunately, no one is willing to change their position. For the media, it is comfortable to exist in a potentially racist climate. Likewise, citizens with an anti-Roma bias feel supported when the mass media seems to confirm their stereotypes.”
 
Discriminatory media coverage
 
The media coverage of the Roma needs to be analysed within the wider context of their image in Romanian society. There are officially 619 000 Roma citizens in Romania. According to estimates, however, the real number is closer to two millions, or approximately 10 percent of the population. Because of the negative image associated with the ethnic group, many people refuse to identify themselves as Roma.
 
Even the Romanian president, Traian Băsescu, has been the subject of several investigations for uttering racist remarks.
 
In 2007, Băsescu confiscated the mobile phone of a reporter who had approached him in a supermarket. The phone was on and the president was caught, in a private conversation with his wife, describing the journalist as “a dirty gypsy.”
 
Codreanu wants media organisations and professionals to be aware of the responsibility they carry towards society when reporting about the Roma minority. As for Lăcătuş, he regrets that “journalists cannot get rid of their own stereotypes and do not realise that they are not relevant for the article.”
 
In collaboration with the Centre for Independent Journalism in Romania, Lăcătu contributed to the elaboration in 2002 of a code of conduct for a responsible coverage of minorities. Both Lăcătu and Codreanu believe that respecting these rules will lead to a better and more objective coverage of the Roma minority.
 
Guidelines for best practices in reporting about minorities:
 
Respect others with regards to gender, ethnicity, level of education, age, and religious or political orientation. Add details such as level of education, age, and ethnicity, religious or political orientation only when relevant in the context.
 
Ask interviewees how they want to be presented and respect their wish in your report. Avoid sensationalism based on stereotypes and prejudices. Identify your own stereotypes and prejudices and make sure they do not affect your reporting. Choose a neutral style when using information from other sources. Use balanced arguments and avoid words conveying negative or positive discrimination.
 
Don’t let your personal experience influence you when reporting about a minority, because it is irrelevant. Give the same attention to all parties involved in the topic and include representatives of minorities among your sources.
 
Beware of the fact that there may be cultural obstacles between you and your subject matter that might block the access to information. Correct grammatical errors in quotes, if they put your sources in a bad light. Report with the strong will to create bridges of understanding between social categories, human groups and individuals.
 
Write about a Roma, as you would write about someone close to you. Look for facts and logical explanations and not for culprits. Crime and poverty do not have any ethnical colour, but they could have some systemical explanations. Dig deep inside the system.
 
http://fra.europa.eu/fraWebsite/racism_and_xenophobia/racism_and_xenophobia_en.htm
 
* EU Feeds – Over 1,000 newspapers updated every 20 minutes. http://www.eufeeds.eu/


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Rio+20: who owns the Green Economy?
by Matthew Rimmer
The Conversation
 
The Rio+20 summit has raised a number of difficult questions about law and technology: what is the relationship between intellectual property and the environment? What role does intellectual property play in sustainable development? Who will own and control the Green Economy? What is the best way to encourage the transfer of environmentally sound technologies? Should intellectual property provide incentives for fossil fuels? What are the respective roles of the public sector and the private sector in green innovation? How should biodiversity, traditional knowledge and Indigenous intellectual property be protected?
 
The Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 resulted in a number of landmark agreements. The 1992 texts include the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, Agenda 21, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the Forest Principles. These agreements considered the relationship between intellectual property, sustainable development, and the environment.
 
The Rio+20 conference has focused on two central themes: “a green economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication” and the “institutional framework for sustainable development”. Chinese diplomat Sha Zukang, secretary-general for Rio+20, observed: “A critical issue is Intellectual Property Rights, for which I have always stressed the key is affordability. If technologies are not affordable, then all this pledge to international cooperation is just empty talk.”
 
There was much debate over intellectual property, development, and the Green Economy at the summit.
 
Intellectual property, technology transfer, and the Green Economy
 
1992’s Agenda 21 said “consideration must be given to the role of patent protection and intellectual property rights along with an examination of their impact on the access to and transfer of environmentally sound technology, in particular to developing countries”. Agenda 21 promoted technology transfer, and envisaged “a collaborative network of … international research centres on environmentally sound technology.”
 
Twenty years later, at Rio+20, there has been further debate over intellectual property, technology transfer and the environment.
 
One observer, IP Watch , noted: “… the developed and the developing world are divided on the mechanisms needed to make [innovation and green technology] happen on the ground … Intellectual property rights are a vital piece of this fractious debate.”
 
The World Intellectual Property Organization’s Rio+20 submission said: “The Intellectual Property system, and in particular patents, are fundamental in that they provide a stimulus for investment in innovation and contribute to a rapid – and global – diffusion of new technologies.”
 
China and the G77 called for “an International Mechanism” to facilitate “transfer of technology in sustainable development.” The International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD) proposed a Global Green Innovation and Technology Partnership.
 
The early June draft of the Rio+20 text noted “that consideration must be given to the role of patent protection and intellectual property rights along with an examination of their impact on the access to and transfer of environmentally sound technology, in particular to developing countries”.
 
The United States, the European Union, Japan, Canada, Australia and Switzerland wanted to delete this paragraph. Such nations favoured strong protection of intellectual property rights in order to encourage private investment in the research and development of environmental technologies. Martin Khor of the Third World Network noted that developed countries were hostile to obligations on technology transfer: “Wherever the words ‘technology transfer’ appear, there is an attempt to change it to voluntary transfer on mutually agreed terms and conditions”. The United States, Canada, and Japan also opposed the establishment of a Technology Mechanism at Rio+20.
 
Intellectual property is a cipher in Rio+20 – a topic of “importance”, but not worthy of further textual elaboration. The final Rio+20 text – entitled the Future We Want – merely affirms “the importance of technology transfer to developing countries” and recalls “the provisions on technology transfer, finance, access to information, and intellectual property rights as agreed in the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation”. The minimalist text on intellectual property in Rio+20 is terse compared to Agenda 21’s much more extensive provisions.
 
Rio+20 creates no new Technology Mechanism, like the UNFCCC Climate Technology Centre. It merely asks for countries to “strengthen international cooperation”. It invites governments “to create enabling frameworks that foster environmentally sound technology.” It also recognises that “the private sector can contribute to the achievement of sustainable development, including through the important tool of public-private partnerships”.
 
There was a significant push to end subsidies for fossil fuels at Rio+20. However, intellectual property law continues to play a double role – providing incentives alike for clean, renewable energy; as well as dirty, polluting technologies in coal, oil, and gas.
 
Intellectual property, public health and access to medicines
 
The Future We Want text does recognise “the importance of universal health coverage to enhancing health, social cohesion and sustainable human and economic development.” It emphasises that “HIV and AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, influenza, polio and other communicable diseases remain serious global concerns”. It also acknowledges “the global burden and threat of non-communicable diseases”.
 
There was much debate as to whether the text should refer to the debate over intellectual property, public health, and access to essential medicines. Even though Hillary Clinton emphasised the need to “chart a path towards an AIDS-free generation”, the United States delegation wanted to delete references to access to essential medicines.
 
However, at Brazil’s insistence, Paragraph 142 of the text of Future We Want maintains: “We reaffirm the right to use, to the full … flexibilities [under international intellectual property] for the protection of public health, and, in particular, to promote access to medicines for all, and encourage the provision of assistance to developing countries in this regard.”
 
This is an important symbolic recognition of the connections between public health, sustainable development, and the environment.
 
More could have been done at Rio+20. One suggestion was Rio+20 should have established “patent pools” (along the lines of the Medicines Patents Pool) to “finance the transfer of clean technologies and their development in developing countries.”
 
A Global Indigenous Network: intellectual property, traditional knowledge and biodiversity. The Future We Want text says: “We stress the importance of the participation of indigenous peoples in the achievement of sustainable development.” Moreover, it recognises “that traditional knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous peoples and local communities make an important contribution to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.” However, there is a lack of firm commitment to protect traditional knowledge and Indigenous intellectual property.
 
The Australian Government made a notable contribution to the debate, establishing a Global Indigenous Network. Built on the model of Caring for Our Country, the Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities Land and Sea Managers Network will also involve New Zealand, Norway, and Brazil. The Prime Minister Julia Gillard observed that this forum “will help us listen and learn”.
 
This is an innovative policy contribution. It may help practically manage and protect traditional knowledge in a range of jurisdictions. The proposal could be strengthened further with legislative reforms to protect Indigenous Intellectual Property in participating countries. It could also be extended to other nations – particularly members of the Alliance of Small Island States.
 
The Convention on Biological Diversity 1992 also promotes informed consent and benefit-sharing in respect of genetic resources held by Indigenous Communities.
 
Our common vision?
 
The Rio+20 text The Future We Want speaks of “our common vision” for sustainable development and the Green Economy. However, the topic of intellectual property and the environment at Rio+20 was the subject of division, confrontation, and ultimately a lack of consensus.
 
The minimalist, weak text on intellectual property, technology transfer, and the Green Economy retreats from the Earth Summit’s texts two decades ago. Instead, there is hortatory language about encouragement, acknowledgement, and reaffirmation. There has been concern that such important issues have been glossed over at the summit. Perversely, the Future We Text subtracts from international law on intellectual property, the environment, and sustainable development.
 
Reflecting on the lack of real progress at Rio+20, Norwegian international leader and advocate of sustainable development Gro Harlem Brundtland observed that there were “complex reasons” why governments had failed to take the “common vision” further – including the power of corporations: “In our political system, corporations, businesses and people who have economic power influence political decision-makers – that’s a fact, and so it’s part of the analysis.”
 
Future international summits on the environment, biodiversity, and climate change have been left to reconcile such tensions over intellectual property and the global commons.
 
* Matthew Rimmer is Associate Professor in Intellectual Property at the Australian National University.


 

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