Exiled media
Last updated
Last updated
Internews’ new report documents the issues exiled media face and how governments, donors, and others can support these outlets to continue their vital work. The report, Flight and Fight: Supporting Exiled Media to Survive and Sustain is based on interviews with 25 exiled media outlets from 17 countries, including Cuba, Syria, Sudan, Russia, and China.
"This report, the second in a series by Freedom House on transnational repression, examines the ways in which nondemocratic governments are pursuing their critics abroad, what governments that host exiles and diasporas can do to protect individuals targeted by foreign states, and where gaps in existing safeguards remain."
"The Syrian independent exile media as a sector is at the core of this study. To understand the unique nature of this sector, the study contextualises the issues pertaining to the Syrian independent exile media in the wider framework of exile media globally, and donors’ approaches to media development in the context of conflict, postconflict and fragile states (including approaches to exile media); it also discusses lessons learned more generally and draws on examples through case studies.
The study is divided into two parts:
Independent exile media globally — practices, policies and lessons learned; and
Syrian exile organisations and institutions."
The development of the Syrian independent media organisations and institutions was itself a kind of revolution that challenged and provided an alternative to the highly controlled pre-war Syrian media landscape.
Now, the case of the Syrian independent media sector proves that professional development and achievement is possible even in the most extreme situations. Efforts to consolidate the media organisations professionally and institutionally continues, even if, with far less support available, many media organisations are closing or have been considering doing so. A number of media organisations are trying to adjust their strategies to survive amid the crisis while maintaining their professional development.
In other words, the Syrian alternative and independent media sector is at a crossroads.
In relation to the publication of the report, IMS hosted a webinar discussing the the lessons learned, challenges and not least opportunities in the future for Syrian independent exile media.
For a brief introduction to the webinar and the speakers, please click here.
To watch the recording of the webinar, please click here.
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