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The Threat to Press Freedom in the 21st Century

What is Press Freedom?

Press freedom refers to the ability of journalists, media organisations, and individuals to report, investigate, and publish information without undue interference, censorship, or retaliation from the state, corporations, or other powerful entities. It is a fundamental pillar of democracy, ensuring transparency, accountability, and an informed public.

True press freedom includes:

  • Legal protection from state interference or legal threats.
  • Pluralism, ensuring a diversity of media voices.
  • Editorial independence, allowing journalists to report without corporate or political influence.
  • Freedom from violence, meaning journalists can work without fear of intimidation, imprisonment, or assassination.

Why is Press Freedom Important?

A free press holds power to account. It investigates corruption, challenges abuses, and ensures that the public has access to accurate and diverse information. When the press is strong, democracy is strong. Without it, misinformation thrives, power becomes unchecked, and authoritarian tendencies grow.

The decline of press freedom is not just an issue of censorship—it affects human rights, social justice, and the very fabric of democratic governance.

Why is Press Freedom Under Threat?

There are several factors contributing to the erosion of press freedom globally:

  1. Authoritarianism and the Rise of the Far Right
    Far-right movements, often linked to nationalism, populism, and reactionary politics, tend to view the press as an enemy. Figures like Donald Trump in the US, Viktor Orbán in Hungary, and Narendra Modi in India have openly attacked the media, branding journalists as “fake news” peddlers or “enemies of the people.” This delegitimises journalism and justifies restrictions on press freedom.
  2. State Control and Legal Suppression
    Many governments now use legal mechanisms to suppress critical journalism. Laws on national security, defamation, or so-called “fake news” have been weaponised to arrest journalists or shut down independent outlets. For example, Orbán’s Hungary has brought much of the media under state control, while Russia and China imprison dissident journalists.
  3. Corporate Influence and Media Consolidation
    A handful of powerful corporations own vast sections of the global media. Rupert Murdoch’s empire, for instance, has helped shift political discourse to the right in multiple countries. When media ownership is concentrated, editorial independence weakens, and news becomes shaped by corporate and political interests.
  4. Surveillance and Digital Censorship
    Governments are increasingly using digital tools to track, intimidate, and silence journalists. Some regimes exploit spyware (e.g., Pegasus) to monitor dissenters. Social media algorithms, influenced by state pressure or corporate interests, also limit the reach of independent journalism.
  5. Physical Attacks on Journalists
    Violence against journalists is rising. From the murder of Jamal Khashoggi to the repression of investigative journalists in the Philippines and Mexico, those who expose corruption and state abuse are at risk. Impunity for such crimes emboldens further attacks.
  6. Disinformation and the Undermining of Trust
    The spread of disinformation, often amplified by far-right movements, weakens faith in journalism. When people distrust the press, they turn to conspiracy theories, state propaganda, or hyper-partisan sources that confirm their biases. This benefits authoritarian leaders, who thrive on controlling public perception.

The Far-Right and the Attack on Journalism

Far-right movements, in particular, see the press as a threat because it exposes their tactics—racism, xenophobia, corruption, and attacks on democracy. They rely on:

  • Discrediting journalists by calling them biased or untrustworthy.
  • Promoting alternative, hyper-partisan media that reinforce their worldview.
  • Using state power to restrict press freedom, such as closing media outlets or arresting critics.
  • Normalising misinformation so that truth itself becomes contested.

This has dangerous consequences. When the press is weakened, authoritarianism flourishes. When journalists are silenced, corruption grows. When information is controlled, democracy erodes.

The decline of press freedom, then, is a crisis for democracy. The rise of the far-right has played a central role in this trend, using legal, digital, and violent means to control information. Defending press freedom is not just about protecting journalists—it is about preserving truth, accountability, and democratic governance.

If you are interested in supporting press freedom in a number of imaginative ways, then visit https://rsf.org – Reporters Without Borders.

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MY PHOTO JOURNEY MY THERAPY JOURNEY Sophistication (Mastery)

Through the Lens of Trust: The Ethical Challenges of Photographing Your Own Children

This post is based on one originally written in 2017 as part of my private reflective journal following an intriguing exchange with a couple of students on an MA in Photography. It was posted there in June 2017, just four months before Harvey Weinstein was first accused of sexually abusing female staff and clients of his. I have edited and added to it, but some of the references are now seven years old.

I don’t seriously believe that anyone can not be aware that there are concerns that the modelling profession is potentially highly exploitative, and that in trying to survive within it many models have been abused; whether this is overt sexual exploitation (the Directors’ couch) or indirectly related to body-image (especially leading to eating disorders). This year alone [2017] has seen meta-analyses related to thinness standards (Rodgers, et al, 2017) and similar concerns among the physical trainer community (Fernández-Balboa & González-Calvo, 2017).

Within documentary photography, and especially in the street-photography genre, there’s a widely accepted (in the majority of countries) principle, that someone in a public place has to accept that their image may be captured, and that the resulting photograph may be published, potentially for the financial gain of the photographer. However, it is also widely accepted that these photos may not be used for commercial purposes, and especially not to imply that the subject (the model) is endorsing a product, service, or brand. Doing so, would constitute abuse.

If adults are prone to these issues, then we have to be particularly concerned about children. In the UK, individuals are defined as children if they are under 18, though in certain circumstances for protection purposes, this extends to “at least 21” and therefore potentially beyond. Rather naive lay-people consider abuse to involve physical violence or be sexual in its nature. The NSPCC recognises 12 different forms of child abuse.

With children, whose brains are still developing (until their mid-20s, even) it is now known that even quite mild forms of neglect and emotional abuse (known professionally as ‘childhood adversities’) can lead to serious psychiatric conditions in adulthood – in particular schizophrenia and bipolar disorder – and we are rapidly reaching concensus as to the neurochemical basis of this (Aas, et al, 2017).

With the advent of Facebook, there are a growing number of children whose parents regularly post images of their children as they grow up. While these images might previously have been filed away in a photo album, today they are distributed widely for friends (and if the privacy settings are not used to otherwise restrict them, with the general public worldwide). There has already been one case of a child sueing her parents for the invasion of privacy that this represents (http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/teenager-sues-parents-over-embarrassing-childhood-pictures-on-facebook-austria-a7307561.html).

Children (especially young ones) cannot make decisions on their own. They rely on those they trust to help them do so. Of course, most parents at various times will gently manipulate their children’s decisions in the parents’ favour. Persuading a child to eat all of its food, or to go to bed at a given time, not to use their computer at certain times, and so on, are all deemed normal child raising.

If a parent is a keen photographer, whether amateur or professional, they are likely to encourage their children to pose for their photographs to be taken. That ‘encouragement’ very easily slips into a message of conditional love, which is the foundation of emotional abuse. This is not about anything being done to them, it is about the sense that they will be loved just a little bit more if they engage, and a little bit less if they do not.

The American photographer, Sally Mann, has always been regarded as controversial by many people because of the extent to which she documented her children until puberty. Her youngest daughter described her feelings when her mother stopped doing so and began to work only on landscapes, as feeling as though she had been deserted. The two girls both associated the taking of the photos as a demonstration of their mother’s love for them; that they drew this conclusion clearly suggests that they did not get the same strength of love from other activities. Sally Mann’s son committed suicide in 2016, having suffered from schizophrenia all through his adult life. One of her daughters became a substance abuser as an early teenager, dropped out of high school, and was sent to a boarding school thereby removing her from the domestic environment. Mann herself was extensively photographed by her father as a child, and reports that she has blocked her memory of her childhood almost completely – a classic symptom of abuse.

In this digital age, though, the issues don’t stop there. A child cannot possibly be expected to understand the potential consequences of their pictures being seen by a wider audience. They depend on the person they trust to inform them in this respect. If the parent is the photographer, and their livelihood depends on the sale of those images, then I find it hard to see how this is likely to lead to neutral or trustworthy advice. This situation is bad enough when the parent depends on the income from their child and registers them with a modelling agency, but when they are the photographer and seller any possibility of objectivity is surely lost. While Facebook has guidelines in place regarding nudity, these images need not be of the naked child. The abuse is in letting the child believe that they will be loved more if they allow themselves to be photographed. Children don’t say this. Asking how they feel is meaningless as they don’t have the emotional maturity to know. They probably don’t know how they feel and won’t for many years. This is not a question of the process by which they are engaged in the photo-making itself – it is about their sense of themselves, of their self-esteem, and how (in years to come) they feel about the experiences.

As a psychotherapist, I am very aware that most people’s ‘issues’ relate to childhood events and family dynamics, and how they perceive them. As James asserted in the title of his book, “they fuck you up” [your parents] (James, 2006)

So, where does this all lead?

REFERENCES

Aas, M., Dieset, I., Hope, S., Hoseth, E., Mørch, R., Reponen, E., … & Agartz, I. (2017). Childhood maltreatment severity is associated with elevated C-reactive protein and body mass index in adult with schizophrenia and bipolar diagnoses. Brain, behavior, and immunity.

Fernández-Balboa, J. M., & González-Calvo, G. (2017). A critical narrative analysis of the perspectives of physical trainers and fitness instructors in relation to their body image, professional practice and the consumer culture. Sport, Education and Society, 1-13.

James, O (2006) They F*** You Up: How to Survive Family Life (2nd Ed). Bloomsbury.

Rodgers, R. F., Ziff, S., Lowy, A. S., Yu, K., & Austin, S. B. (2017). Results of a strategic science study to inform policies targeting extreme thinness standards in the fashion industry. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 50(3), 284-292.

UPDATE (19/01/25)

In early January 2025, the Dallas Fort Worth Police executed a warrant to secure images of Mann’s children on display at the Fort Worth Modern Art Museum, on the grounds that they were alleged to be child pornography. This is not the first time that such concerns have been expressed, as they were back in 1995 soon after they were taken. However, it will be interesting to see whether the tide has changed on the popularity of Mann’s work.

Inside The Vexing Past Of Photographer Behind The Fort Worth Modern Art Museum’s Offensive Exhibit