19/06/2012

CMPF Summer School: Status of journalists (Best practices)


Best Practices nb#1
Status of journalists (professional and/or non-professional, including bloggers)
Case in France
Melissa Chemam
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Summer School for Journalists
CMFP, Florence, June 2012
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I have been a journalist for seven years, trained in Paris and I have been working as a journalist in France for three years before I moved to report from abroad and finally worked for British media. From this experience, what I can underline as a good practice in France is that the status of journalists is pretty well defined and protected in this European country. Journalist is a respected profession in France, though many struggles especially freelancers and bloggers. Journalists have a specific status and laws are into place to try to protect their work and their independence.
This status of journalists has been defined pretty early in France, in the late nineteenth century and is pretty much the same nowadays. It comes from the 1881 Law on the Freedom of the Press voted on July the 29th 1881, under the French Third Republic - often called Press Law of 1881. The law defines the freedoms and responsibilities of the media and publishers in France and provides a legal framework for publications. It also therefore regulates the display of advertisements on public roads. It has been amended several times since its enactment, but remains in force to the present day.
The text established a number of basic principles, which liberalised the publishing industry, as the law requires only that publishers present their names to the authorities with two copies of their work. The authorities were denied the power to suppress newspapers and délits d'opinion - crimes of opinion, or types of prohibited speech – was then abolished. It also attributes to journalist a professional card, the ‘press card’, and grants them with a tax allowance, two measures aimed at protecting them from financial struggle in order to insure a better editorial independence.
Another important law define the press’ legal framework in France in the audiovisual field, dating from 1982. It made radios and televisions opened to private operators, completely revolutioning the French broadcasting landscape. A large number of other rules finally protect freedom of expression for every kind of press in France.

Finally a Charter of the Professional Duties of French Journalists was adopted by the National Syndicate of French Journalists in 1918 and revised and completed by the Syndicate in 1938. The Loi Guernut-Brachard passed in 1935 also defined the collective labour contract for journalists. The statute was revised in 1956 under the leadership of Marcel Roëls, and then in 1968, 1974, and 1987.

 

However, we must note that the media landscape in France has changed a lot in recent years: the press is trying to conquer the web (with many popular websites such as Rue 89, Mediapart, etc), the arrival of 14 new, young and very active channels shaking ageing TV landscape with its five major channels, and new technologies “redefining the status of journalists”, according to the European Journalism Centre. “Paradoxically, the press is not doing well but more and more people are trained in journalism schools, while logs are an increasingly legitimate source (and more reactive) than newspapers on certain specialities”, it stated on its website.
According to the BBC country profiles, “France enjoys a free press and has more than 100 daily newspapers; most of them are in private hands and are not linked to political parties”. But it is, in fact, a difficult time for journalists who have encountered a true identity crisis in France.
We can add along with the European Journalism Centre that “the present media landscape in France has its cultural roots in the postwar period, when the state decided to regulate an industry that lost credit after the collaborationist Vichy regime. The state is hence still very present in the written press (via a recently renewed system of subsidies), the TV (with France Televisions as a major actor and its president almost directly appointed by the state), the radio (Radio France group has two stations in the top five in terms of audience), the cinema (with a complex system of subsidies handled by the National Cinematographic Center, or the CNC), and more recently on the Internet (with regulations on cultural products, downloading and property rights known as Hadopi). State-level decisions regarding French media are thus awaited with impatience and are often very important moments”.
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