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Arion McNicoll

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Why Journalism Still Deserves Support

Posted: 18/05/2012 12:20

Next Tuesday, The Journalism Foundation will host a gala event to benefit the Foundation's work supporting free and ethical journalism around the world.

The gala aims to raise money to support our global projects, including the establishment of a new college of journalism in Tunisia, and a programme to train young journalists in South Sudan.

The Journalism Foundation was set up in 2011 by Simon Kelner, former editor of The Independent newspaper, and is backed by the Lebedev family. In September last year I began work as the editor of the Foundation's website. Alongside the usual editorial tasks, the role also involves working closely with the Foundation's projects including, most recently, helping redesign and relaunch a local website in Stoke-on-Trent, travelling to Tunisia to help manage a workshop for journalists in the wake of the Arab Spring and helping to set up the Foundation's new projects in India and Tanzania.

Everyone in the organisation is similarly engaged, bringing some kind of practical journalistic or logistical skills to the mix to help with the work we do. In a sense we are all project officers for the Foundation, helping get journalistic endeavours off the ground as well fulfilling our official job titles.

The event on Tuesday night will be the Foundation's first fundraiser and has been put together with donations from across the media and entertainment world. Money will be raised through the auction of 'money-can't-buy' lots, which will include such enticements as lunch with Gillian Anderson cooked by Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's, tickets and flights to the see the world premiere in New Zealand of The Hobbit, and dinner for eight cooked in the winning bidder's own home by Mark Hix with Blur star Alex James overseeing the cheese course. Other lots include a spa day with Nancy Dell'Olio at Champneys, a dress designed by Alice Temperley, and a collection of cakes from James Middleton's cake company.

In writing this feature, I got in touch with Evgeny Lebedev to ask him about why he was interested in starting up a charity geared towards the support of ethical journalism. He said: "Press freedom is a matter very close to my heart. Having grown up in Russia, I know how a restricted press can be detrimental to both individual and public life.

"The Journalism Foundation is less than a year old, but is already building a reputation for fulfilling the old maxim of thinking globally while acting locally.

"It is my hope that others will feel as passionately as I do, that quality journalism is worthy of our support. I know that the Foundation's success will serve to remind people that contrary to the prevailing opinion in some quarters, journalism can be and almost always is a force for good."

After the fundraiser the real work of the Foundation will begin anew. The first project we aim to support is an endeavor in South Sudan which will train local journalists to film stories on their mobile phones. The films they produce will be edited into news packages and screened around the country using portable cinemas. In South Sudan media is still relatively scarce - this project aims to broaden communication in the world's youngest country.

Another new project we are supporting is a newspaper in Tanzania. The paper, Kwanza Jamii - the translation from Swahili means "Community First" - was established as part of a charitable organisation in 2010, and it has taken its vocation very seriously. Based in Njombe the newspaper serves readers in a sizeable and remote catchment area - the paper circulates anywhere within 60 miles of its main office. The Journalism Foundation aims to support Kwanza Jamii as it develops an online edition, and our ultimate ambition is to help drive the paper towards profitability.

After running a successful training course earlier this year to Tunisian journalists we are now working towards establishing a permanent journalism faculty in the country. We hope that our support will help journalism grow as Tunisia continues to take giant strides towards freedom and democracy.

As an organisation, The Journalism Foundation exists to demonstrate the value of journalism in strengthening democracy throughout the world. Of the gala next week Simon Kelner, our chief executive, said: "Our mission is to develop free and ethical journalism by supporting media projects that have a positive effect on people's lives. We hope that the generosity of those attending the evening will help us fund the projects that further these aims."

Visit the Journalism Foundation's website here or follow them on Twitter @4journalism

 

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Next Tuesday, The Journalism Foundation will host a gala event to benefit the Foundation's work supporting free and ethical journalism around the world. The gala aims to raise money to support our gl...
Next Tuesday, The Journalism Foundation will host a gala event to benefit the Foundation's work supporting free and ethical journalism around the world. The gala aims to raise money to support our gl...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greysells2
grey cells matter
08:43 PM on 05/21/2012
Never pea into the teeth of a gale. Always a chance of getting bitten and you will always get wet.
06:34 PM on 05/21/2012
I agree heartily that Journalism deserves respect But we have very little jounalism now; it has mostly been replaced by left wing propaganda from people who through ignorance or self interent promote the left's agenda. It is sad to see what has happened to CBS, ABC, and NBC. And it often appears that the appropriate name for the Associated Press would be Associated Propagandists. Not all propagandists are left wing, but most are, and what makes them so insidious is that they present themselves as jounalists reporting facts, when they are really slanting everything to their point of view, even, as in the recent case of Treyvan Martin, omitting crucial parts of a 911 conversation, to make it appear that the facts supported what they want people to believe. It is a shame that these same leftists, who will promptly tell you how important a free press is, support people who, as soon as they have enough power, will eliminate the free press, as Chavez has done. Of course, if what you really want is a job as a government propagandist, then the elimination of a free press might be to your liking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greysells2
grey cells matter
08:48 PM on 05/21/2012
The Press is corporate owned and profit is their only motivation. If it doesn't make money they won't cover it. It is a conservative meme that the Press is a tool of the leftwingers/liberals and it exists only in the minds of GOPTeas.
11:54 PM on 05/21/2012
Was it the profit movie that sent the thrill up the leg of Chris Matthews? Or that brought about the absolutely vicious attack of mainstream media on Sarah Palin and her family? Or that caused crucial words in the 911 tape re Zimmerman to be omitted from the version broadcast? Or that prevented the mainstream press from properly vetting and questioning Obama before his election? Just to point out a few examples of bias you apparently have not been able to recognize.
07:42 PM on 05/20/2012
Today's Journalism in all forms of the Media is a farce!
They used to REPORT the news, nowadays they want to MAKE the news.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Scribe57
It would take too long to explain.
10:23 PM on 05/20/2012
They don't even care about the news anymore. It's all about the money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greysells2
grey cells matter
08:50 PM on 05/21/2012
Worse yet the pundits, commentators, spin doctors and news personalities believe THEY ARE the news. It's all about ratings and money. Truth finishes last.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
08:17 PM on 05/19/2012
I will fully support Journalism when Journalists start cleaning up the profession itself.
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
11:43 AM on 05/20/2012
Agreed, journalism is valid & important, but only when done professionally & morally. Yes if they need to bend rules slightly in order to expose corruption etc, you can forgive them. But hacking victims phones etc, that's just way way too far!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
12:57 PM on 05/20/2012
a return to "standards" of  "who, what,when, where and how"  and  let us  judge the  "why"   and  most importantly "verify,verify,verify"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Drg40
Representative Democracy is all we have.
10:50 PM on 05/18/2012
IMV there is one problem in journalism as a profession which needs addressing. Some journalism is brilliant, worthy of the highest accolades. I know that because I am told so all the time, in print and on the screen. On and on and on and on. All UK journalism is perfection on feet. UK investigative journalism is widely admired throughout the world and can be relied upon to pursue the wrongdoer whilst carefully ensuring that the law is never transgressed. Opinion and facts are never mixed and no UK newspaper has ever contemplated mixing advertising and editorial. Dear me, no. Stories are covered without fear or favour, whether or not they are in the interests of the proprietor or his chosen political party. We never have the situation where same boring old flatulences appear on telly as though they own it, with their own, wildly outdated political views. Individual privacy is never invaded.. All journalists are perfect and the point of the Journalism Foundation is to make sure that the scum, who will insist on finding their news mixed in with the pictures of cheap totty, recognise that fact.