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CONTRIBUTION FOR THE FOURTH CYCLE OF THE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW ON NICARAGUA – REPORT ON THE SITUATION OF FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN NICARAGUA
The report documents increasing violations, as well as a rise in attacks against journalists, activists, media outlets, students, clergy, artists, and political opponents, among other actors.
Inter American Press Association — 3 September 2024 -
The political influence industry In Canada
OpenMedia’s research report sheds light on dozens of secretive businesses that handle people’s sensitive voting behaviour data on behalf of federal political parties in Canada – with few effective rules limiting their actions.
OpenMedia — 15 August 2024 -
“Why Do They Hate Us So Much?” Discriminatory Censorship Laws Harm Education in Florida
Since 2021, Florida has issued laws and policies that censor and distort the curriculum and educational environment of K-12 classrooms in ways inconsistent with international human rights standards on education, access to information, and discrimination.
Human Rights Watch — 20 June 2024 -
Mexico: Protect the Press
A new joint report found that Mexico’s Federal Mechanism for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders and Journalists failed to adequately evaluate risks journalists are facing, implements at times ineffective protective measures and lacks specialized knowledge of challenges to press freedom in Mexico.
Committee to Protect Journalists / Amnesty International — 8 March 2024 -
Privacy First: A Better Way to Address Online Harms
In this report, EFF explores a new approach to tackling online harms leaving behind strategies based on ill-conceived bills and censorship-driven solutions.
Electronic Frontier Foundation — 15 November 2023 -
Shouting into the void: Why reporting abuse to social media platforms is so hard and how to fix it
When PEN America and Meedan asked writers, journalists, and creators about their experiences reporting online abuse to social media platforms, thet heard again and again, over the past three years, about the deep frustration, exasperation, and harm caused by the reporting mechanisms themselves.
PEN America — 25 October 2023 -
“Scorched lands of journalism in the Amazon” – RSF report
The report contains previously unpublished data on the obstacles to press freedom, particularly for local journalists, in the Brazilian Amazon, a region at the heart of the global climate challenge.
Reporters Without Borders — 22 September 2023 -
Booklash: Literary Freedom, Online Outrage, and the Language of Harm
PEN America warns that social media blowback and societal outrage are imposing new moral litmus tests on books and authors, chilling literary expression and fueling a dangerous trend of self-censorship that is shrinking writers’ creative freedom and imagination.
PEN America — 16 August 2023 -
MÉTODO CUBA: Independent artists’ testimonies of forced exile
Two years after historic July 11 Demonstrations in Cuba, the plight of writers and artists forced Into exile underscores the drastic deterioration of artistic freedom on the island.
PEN International — 12 July 2023 -
Latin America in a Glimpse 2023
A peek at the gaps shaping our experiences on the internet.
Derechos Digitales — 20 June 2023 -
The Unfreedom Monitor: Venezuela Country Report
The Unfreedom Monitor report provides insights into the current state of freedom in Venezuela and highlights challenges faced by journalists and media in the country.
Global Voices Advox — 6 June 2023 -
The Unfreedom Monitor: El Salvador country report
This report analyses two major incidents: the disclosure that Pegasus spyware has been used against journalists from independent media outlets and representatives of civil society, and Bukele’s legal advisor’s threats against two women journalists for not revealing anonymous sources included in a news story.
Global Voices Advox — 24 May 2023 -
The Unfreedom Monitor – Ecuador Country Report
A methodology for tracking digital authoritarianism around the world.
Global Voices Advox — 16 May 2023 -
Legal aid resources in Brazil: A guide for journalists facing legal action
CPJ has worked with local partners to compile this directory of resources providing different types of legal aid to help connect journalists in Brazil in need of legal support with the initiatives and organizations that can support them.
Committee to Protect Journalists — 14 February 2023 -
2022 Elections: Defending Freedom of Expression.
ARTICLE 19 points out various aspects of the Brazilian electoral process, analyzing the many challenges the country faces from now until October 2022, and then after the elections and the transition, with the recurring threats to the reputation and integrity of the elections made by government officials and members of the armed forces.
ARTIGO 19 — 1 September 2022 -
“I Became Scared, This Was Their Goal”
Efforts to Ban Gender and Sexuality Education in Brazil
Human Rights Watch — 16 May 2022 -
Women Seizing the World, The Participation of Women Writers in Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua
While the presence of women writers and columnists in literature and journalism continues to be a minority in these countries, this reality is changing: new generations of women writers, whether poets, short story writers, journalists or novelists, are making their voices heard more day by day.
PEN International — 13 April 2022 -
Gender violence against journalists
This report, supported by UNESCO’s Global Media Defense Fund, provides an overview of violence against women journalists and gender-based attacks on communicators in Brazil in 2021.
Brazilian Association of Investigative Journalism (Abraji) — 9 March 2022 -
Protection Paradigm – Making protection mechanisms work for Latin American journalists
The report is the outcome of an unprecedented comparative analysis of the protective mechanisms in four countries – Mexico, Honduras, Colombia and Brazil – where 90% of the murders of journalists in the past decade took place.
Reporters Without Borders — 1 March 2022 -
Educational gag orders: Legislative restrictions on the freedom to read, learn, and teach
Between January and September 2021, 24 legislatures across the United States introduced 54 separate bills intended to restrict teaching and training in K-12 schools, higher education, and state agencies and institutions. The majority of these bills target discussions of race, racism, gender, and American history and appear designed to chill academic and educational discussions and impose government dictates on teaching and learning.
PEN America — 30 November 2021 -
Biometrics and counter-terrorism: Case study of Iraq and Afghanistan
This research shows how the U.S. Department of Defense’s biometric programme was developed and implemented without prior assessment of its human rights impact and without the safeguards necessary to prevent its abuse. Its whereabouts and current use today remain unclear.
Privacy International — 8 June 2021 -
LAPD requested Ring footage of Black Lives Matter protests
Along with other civil liberties organizations and activists, EFF has long warned that Amazon Ring and other networked home surveillance devices could be used to monitor political activity and protests. Now we have documented proof that our fears were founded.
Electronic Frontier Foundation — 16 February 2021 -
EFF transition memo to incoming Biden administration
While EFF hopes to work with President Biden on a wide range of policies that affect digital rights in the coming years, it focuseshere on the ones that need his immediate attention and ask that he change course on the previous policies and practices discussed below.
Electronic Frontier Foundation — 25 January 2021 -
Made in Hollywood, Censored by Beijing
This report examines the ways in which Beijing’s censors have affected and influenced Hollywood and the global filmmaking industry.
PEN America — 6 August 2020 -
ARRESTING DISSENT: LEGISLATIVE RESTRICTIONS ON THE RIGHT TO PROTEST
As individuals have mobilized, state legislatures across the country have begun introducing bills meant to suppress, restrict, or criminalize the right to protest at an ever-increasing rate.
PEN America — 27 May 2020 -
Losing the News: The decimation of local news and the search for solutions
This report lays out pathways for revitalizing local journalism in the United States. New, nimble outlets are emerging, and existing outlets are adapting and innovating – developing alternative revenue streams, experimenting with nonprofit models, rebuilding audiences, and better serving communities.
PEN America — 21 November 2019 -
Literature locked up: How prison book restriction policies constitute US’s largest book ban
The reality of book banning in American prisons is systematic and comprehensive. State and federal prison authorities censor content with little oversight or public scrutiny.
PEN America — 7 October 2019 -
INFORME 2017-2018 Observatorio y alerta laboral de periodistas (FOPEA)
Crisis en los medios y situación laboral de los periodistas
Foro de Periodismo Argentino — 21 March 2019 -
TRUTH ON THE BALLOT Fraudulent News, the Midterm Elections, and Prospects for 2020 
In this report, PEN America examines the steps taken by technology companies, government actors, and po- litical parties to curb the influence of fraudulent news in the 2018 U.S. midterm elections.
PEN America — 13 March 2019 -
Art Under Pressure DECREE 349 RESTRICTS CREATIVE FREEDOM IN CUBA
In recent years, Cubans have experienced mo- mentous change, from a gradual loosening of eco- nomic restrictions to greater access to cell phones, Wi-Fi, and social media. But the Cuban govern- ment continues to operate in a highly centralized and controlled way, including in the arts sector,
PEN America — 4 March 2019 -
Prensa acorralada: un juego de violentos y poderosos
Informe sobre el estado de la libertad de prensa en Colombia 2018
Foundation for Press Freedom - FLIP — 8 February 2019 -
PROPUESTA DE ESTÁNDARES LEGALES PARA LA VIGILANCIA EN CHILE 
La regulación de la vigilancia estatal constituye uno de los desafíos más significativos plan- teados por la irrupción de las tecnologías de comunicación: aunque esperamos que el apara- to estatal mantenga la seguridad, su capacidad de buscar esos fines infringiendo la privaci- dad crece sin una respuesta normativa.
Derechos Digitales — 9 October 2018 -
Aiding Repression in Egypt: Why the United States Needs to Keep Human Rights Conditions on Military Aid
Civil society leaders in Egypt are urging the U.S. government to continue to condition and withhold military aid to Egypt until the Egyptian government makes meaningful reforms to its human rights practices.
Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS) — 20 September 2018 -
The U-turn: Moreno steers Ecuador away from Correa’s media repression
Journalists say they will be wary until Moreno fulfills his promises to scale back the Communications Law and scrap the regulator that enforced it.
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 14 July 2018 -
Pay No Attention to That Man Behind the Curtain
Exposing and Challenging Government Hacking for Surveillance
Privacy International — 11 July 2018 -
Press freedom under threat: International Press Freedom Mission to the United States May 2018
In recent years, press freedom organizations have become increasingly concerned by the challenges faced by the media in the United States (US).
ARTICLE 19, Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), IFEX, Index on Censorship, International Press Institute (IPI) , Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 3 May 2018 -
Alternative Report on the Situation of Freedom of the Press and Violence against Journalists in Guatemala
In view of the examination of Guatemala before the Human Rights Committee in March 2018, the Centre for Informative Reports on Guatemala (CERIGUA), with the support of IFEX and the International Network for Human Rights (RIDH), produced an alternative report on the aforementioned issues covering the time- period between 2012 and February 2018, the month in which this report was completed.
IFEX — 12 March 2018 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Venezuela
Along with eroding civil and political freedoms, President Nicolas Maduro’s declaration of a State of Exception and Economic Emergency, extended in May 2017, dictated “strict regulations” to prevent “destabilization campaigns” on the internet
Freedom House — 15 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: United States of America
Americans witnessed several major cyberattacks in the latter half of 2016, including the hacking and subsequent leaking of sensitive information from the Democratic National Committee in the lead up to the vote
Freedom House — 15 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Mexico
A series of revelations renewed concerns about illegal surveillance practices in the country, as spying software sold to the government abusively targeted human rights lawyers, journalists, and activists
Freedom House — 15 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Ecuador
Politically motivated takedown requests for alleged copyright violations targeted online news outlets and the websites of human rights organizations
Freedom House — 15 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Cuba
The government has continued to control the digital landscape by blocking critical sites. Tests also found that the state-owned cellphone provider Cubacel had been systematically filtering domestic SMS containing keywords such as “democracy,” “dictatorship,” and “human rights”
Freedom House — 14 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Colombia
A court acquitted biologist Diego Gómez of violating copyright by sharing an academic paper online after three years of criminal proceedings; he faced up to 8 years in prison.
Freedom House — 14 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Canada
The Federal Court confirmed Canada’s privacy laws have extra-territorial application and ordered a foreign website to remove personal information of Canadians
Freedom House — 14 November 2017 -
Freedom on the Net 2017: Argentina
At least three cyberattacks against digital media outlets were reported in early 2017. One of them was a Distributed Denial-of-Service attack against the news website Adelanto 24, which was taken offline in apparent retaliation for a publication on the army
Freedom House — 14 November 2017 -
Faking news: Fraudulent news and the fight for truth
The report examines the rise of fraudulent news, defined here as demonstrably false information that is being presented as a factual news report with the intention to deceive the public, and the related erosion of public faith in traditional journalism. The report identifies proposed solutions at the intersection of technology, journalism, and civil society to empower news consumers with better skills and tools to help them process the torrents of information they see online.
PEN America — 12 October 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Brazil
In September, the government eliminated the board of trustees of the public Brazilian Communications Company (EBC), which manages Brazil’s public radio and television stations as well as a news agency; the board was intended to ensure the body’s independence. Additional changes allow for the president to appoint and dismiss its top executive.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Cuba
Independent outlets, which are technically illegal but tolerated if they do not cross certain red lines, continued to open and expand.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Venezuela
Venezuela’s economic crisis continued to affect the media industry, leaving dozens of publications in chronic danger of closure due to the difficulty of meeting basic operational costs. Many outlets also faced robberies, vandalism, and hackings.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Argentina
The government of President Mauricio Macri reversed its predecessor’s pattern of hostility toward the private media, resuming regular press conferences and ending official criticism and harassment of specific journalists.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Nicaragua
Daniel Ortega was reelected for a third consecutive term as president in November, at which point he had not held a formal press conference in more than nine years.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Bolivia
Cinemas across the country screened, at no charge, a government-backed film entitled The Cartel of Lies, which scrutinized press outlets and reporters who had reported critically on Morales. The film was also posted to the Ministry of the Presidency’s YouTube page.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: United States
Political polarization in the media worsened during the presidential campaign, due in part to the emergence of “alt-right” news sites that disseminated highly nationalistic or nativist messages, conspiracy theories, and at times false or propagandistic coverage.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Freedom of the Press 2017: Mexico
Article 19, counted 11 murders of journalists in possible connection with their work for the year, and a total of 100 such killings since 2000.
Freedom House — 27 April 2017 -
Our digital future: A crowdsourced agenda for free expression
Internet users from across the globe have come together to create a crowdsourced vision for free expression online. Over 300,000 people from 155 countries worldwide helped shape our roadmap for a Digital Future that includes us all.
OpenMedia — 25 April 2017 -
Let’s Talk TPP Citizens’ Report (Canada)
OpenMedia — 14 March 2017 -
Digital Privacy at the U.S. Border: Protecting the Data On Your Devices and In the Cloud
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) — 10 March 2017 -
Libertades de resistencia. Libertad de expresión y derecho a la información en México 2016
Cuando hablamos de libertades en este in- forme no nos referimos solamente a valo- res abstractos que por lo general se nos ha dicho que debemos defender. Más bien, lo que narramos son historias de trabajo que se desenvuelven en el día a día y que están resistiendo a esas condiciones permanentes de marginación, opacidad y agresión.
ARTICLE 19 — 6 March 2017 -
Veracruz: journalists and the state of fear
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 2 February 2017 -
Surveillance in Latin America: 2016 in Review
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) — 2 January 2017 -
State of Privacy Chile
Privacy International — 4 November 2016 -
State of Privacy Colombia
Privacy International — 4 November 2016 -
State of Privacy Brazil
Privacy International — 4 November 2016 -
The Cycle of Silence: Impunity in murders of communicators in Brazil 2016
ARTICLE 19 — 2 November 2016 -
And Campus For All: Diversity, Inclusion, and Freedom of Speech at U.S. Universities
PEN America — 17 October 2016 -
Unblinking Eyes
Comparative Analysis of Surveillance Laws and Practices in Latin America
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) — 10 October 2016 -
Connecting Cuba
More Space for Criticism but Restrictions Slow Press Freedom Progress
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 28 September 2016 -
A Deadly Shade of Green: Threats to Environmental Human Rights Defenders in Latin America
Latin America is, by far, the most dangerous region of the world for environmental human rights defenders (EHRDs). The lack of effective guarantees of human rights protection in Latin American States has created this dire situation.
ARTICLE 19 — 10 August 2016 -
Periodismo y libertad de expresión en Uruguay
Segundo Informe de Monitoreo de Amenazas
Centro de Archivos y Acceso a la Información Pública — 3 May 2016 -
CJFE’s 2015-2016 Review of Free Expression in Canada
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 3 May 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Ecuador
Since its establishment under the 2013 Communications Law, Ecuador’s media regulator, known as SUPERCOM, has issued sanctions in more than 300 cases against media outlets.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Colombia
Although the mastermind of a notorious journalist murder was convicted and sentenced, impunity remained the norm for Colombia’s dozens of journalist killings over the past two decades.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Canada
A controversial antiterrorism law came into force in June 2015; it includes provisions against “terrorist propaganda” and prohibits actions that “encourage” or “promote” terrorism.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Antigua and Barbuda
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Bahamas
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Barbados
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Belize
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Bolivia
In December 2015, the telecommunications regulatory authority announced that hundreds of broadcast outlets will see their licenses expire by 2019. To stay on the air, they will have to participate in a public licensing process expected to favor government-backed outlets.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Costa Rica
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Dominica
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Dominican Republic
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: El Salvador
In 2015, President Salvador Sánchez Cerén accused the media of promoting a “psychological terror” campaign against the government, following widespread reporting on increasing violence in the country.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Grenada
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Haiti
In a scandal that broke in January, President Michel Martelly’s administration was criticized for handing out envelopes of cash to journalists at a 2014 Christmas reception.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Jamaica
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Peru
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Trinidad and Tobago
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Uruguay
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: United States
Two journalists faced charges following their widely criticized arrest in Ferguson in 2014.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Nicaragua
The administration of President Daniel Ortega set its sights on limiting internet freedom, although a proposed law that would have granted the government broad powers to control online content was defeated.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Mexico
At least four reporters were killed in connection with their work in 2015, and the facilities of media organizations were repeatedly attacked with gunfire and explosives.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Argentina
Macri used presidential decrees to replace the leadership of the two main media regulators and merge them into a new entity under the Ministry of Communications
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Venezuela
The government refused to recognize a decision by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) ordering the reinstatement of the terrestrial broadcast license of television station Radio Caracas Television (RCTV), which was taken off the air in 2007 after a highly politicized campaign against the channel by then president Hugo Chávez.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Paraguay
The access to information law that took effect in September 2015 facilitated journalistic investigations into several corruption scandals, including widespread misuse of funds at the National University of Asunción.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Panama
In a case decried by media advocated as politically motivated, the newspaper La Prensa received a $600,000 fine for material damage and moral harm related to its reporting on mismanagement of government contracts.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Honduras
A new law to protect journalists and human rights advocates took effect in June, drawing cautious optimism from freedom of expression advocates.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Guyana
Following critical coverage of the government in the state-run Guyana Chronicle, Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo in August ordered that headlines in state-run print outlets be screened by his office before publication.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Guatemala
A major corruption inquiry, aided by the work of local investigative journalists, led to the arrests and resignations of dozens of prominent officials during the year.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Cuba
Although internet access remains severely limited, during the year the government continued a slow process of broadening access to online information sources by establishing a series of Wi-Fi hotspots.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Chile
Community radio stations, which face steep obstacles to registration, continue to be subject to service interruptions and confiscation of equipment.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Freedom of the Press 2016: Brazil
Violence against journalists spiked in 2016, with no fewer than six reporters killed in retaliation for their work.
Freedom House — 23 April 2016 -
Situation of Human Rights in Mexico
Unknown author — 2 March 2016 -
Critics Are Not Criminals
Comparative Study of Criminal Defamation Laws in the Americas
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 29 February 2016 -
Latin America in a Glimpse: Human rights and the internet (2015)
Derechos Digitales — 9 November 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Venezuela
Ruling party proposes amendments to cyberterrorism law criminalizing use of social networks to “disrupt public peace”
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: United States
“Federal Communications Commission approved new rules that allow it to regulate the internet as a public utility, including provisions to protect net neutrality”
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Mexico
Mexico continues to be “one of the most hostile environments in the world for journalists and bloggers”
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Ecuador
Hacking, trolling, and threats targeting govement opponents follow President Correa’s Twitter campaign against online critics
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Cuba
Performance artist arrested and detained for online promotion of public performance in Plaza of the Revolution
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Colombia
Former public officials sentenced for illegally intercepting communications of judges, journalists and opposition leaders
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Canada
Net neutrality rules limit telecoms’ ability to favor own streaming services over competitors
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Brazil
“Constitution for the internet” introduced
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Freedom on the Net 2015: Argentina
Supreme Court rules search engines not responsible for user generated content that violates rights or infinges copyright
Freedom House — 31 October 2015 -
Breaking Promises, Blocking Reform: Soft Censorship in Mexico
World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers — 29 October 2015 -
Peru’s Urresti has eyes on presidency despite being charged in 1988 journalist murder
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 17 September 2015 -
Shadow State: Surveillance, Law and Order in Colombia
Privacy International — 31 August 2015 -
The Governance of Telecommunications Surveillance
How Opaque and Unaccountable Practices and Policies Threaten Canadians
Unknown author — 29 May 2015 -
2014-15 Review of Free Expression in Canada
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 5 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Uruguay
Ranked 38th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Suriname
Ranked 57th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Peru
Ranked 91st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Nicaragua
Ranked 111st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Jamaica
Ranked 18th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Haiti
Ranked 103rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Guyana
Ranked 70th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Canada
Ranked 22nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Antigua and Barbuda
Ranked 75th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Mexico
Ranked 139th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Ecuador
Ranked 140th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Chile
Ranked 64th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Colombia
Ranked 118th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Dominican Republic
Ranked 84th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: El Salvador
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Panama
Ranked 97th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Paraguay
Ranked 127th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: United States
Ranked 31st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Trinidad and Tobago
Ranked 48th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: St. Vincent and Grenadines
Ranked 18th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: St. Lucia
Ranked 11th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: St. Kitts and Nevis
Ranked 27th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Honduras
Ranked 152nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Venezuela
Ranked 176th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Grenada
Ranked 35th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Guatemala
Ranked 133rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Dominica
Ranked 41st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Cuba
Ranked 193rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Brazil
Ranked 90th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Bolivia
Ranked 91st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Belize
Ranked 31st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Barbados
Ranked 22nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Bahamas
Ranked 28th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
Freedom of the Press 2015: Argentina
Ranked 107th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2015 -
IPYS Venezuela 2014 Report: Journalism conditioned by disinformation and opacity
Instituto Prensa y Sociedad de Venezuela — 27 February 2015 -
U.S.: Press Freedom Under Fire in Ferguson
PEN America — 27 October 2014 -
Infographics: the deadliest countries for journalists in the Americas
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 30 September 2014 -
Who is killing Central America’s journalists?
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 24 September 2014 -
USA: With Liberty to Monitor All
How Large-Scale US Surveillance is Harming Journalism, Law, and American Democracy
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 11 September 2014 -
Latin America in a glimpse: Human Rights and the Internet (2014)
Derechos Digitales — 30 August 2014 -
USA: With Liberty to Monitor All
How Large-Scale US Surveillance is Harming Journalism, Law, and American Democracy
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 28 July 2014 -
Open Wifi and Copyright: A Primer for Network Operators in the U.S.
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) — 27 May 2014 -
Canada: A Guide to Request Information Disclosed by Telecom Providers
PEN Canada — 22 May 2014 -
Who Has Your Back? 2014: Protecting Your Data From Government Requests
Which companies stand with their users, embracing transparency around government data requests? Which companies have resisted improper government demands by fighting for user privacy in the courts and on Capitol Hill? In short, which companies have your back?
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) — 19 May 2014 -
Halftime for the Brazilian press: Will justice prevail over censorship and violence?
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 6 May 2014 -
Punished for Protesting Rights Violations in Venezuela’s Streets, Detention Centers, and Justice System
This report documents 45 cases from Caracas and three states, involving more than 150 victims, in which security forces have abused the rights of protesters and other people in the vicinity of demonstrations.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 5 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Jamaica
Ranked 18th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Honduras
Ranked 141st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Haiti
Ranked 103rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Guyana
Ranked 70th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Guatemala
Ranked 131st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Grenada
Ranked 39th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: El Salvador
Ranked 78th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Ecuador
Ranked 134th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Dominican Republic
Ranked 84th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Dominica
Ranked 42nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Cuba
Ranked 190th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Costa Rica
Ranked 22nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Colombia
Ranked 115th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Chile
Ranked 64th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Canada
Ranked 26th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Venezuela
“Freedom of private discussion suffered during 2013 due to a series of releases of illegally recorded conversations of prominent Venezuelans”
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: United States
Chelsea Manning sentenced to 35 years in prison for releasing classified documents to WikiLeaks.
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Paraguay
Paraguay does not have a right to information law and continues to use defamation laws against the press”
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Brazil
Ranked 90th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Bolivia
Ranked 95th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Mexico
Duopoly controls over 90 percent of the broadcast market
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Belize
Ranked 33rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Barbados
Ranked 22nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Bahamas
Ranked 27th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Argentina
Ranked 106th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Antigua & Barbuda
Ranked 78th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Ecuador
Increased restrictions on media follow passing of new Communications Law
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Cuba
“Internet penetration rate is 5 percent, one of the lowest in the world”
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Costa Rica
Journalists no longer face imprisonment for releasing secret political information following revision of controversial 2012 law
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Colombia
“Armed groups maintain a presence on many campuses to generate political support and intimidate opponents”
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Chile
Police often use excessive force against student protestors
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Brazil
Comprehensive freedom of information act not yet implemented a year after becoming law
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom in the World 2014: Argentina
Supreme Court upholds Media Law to diversify ownership in the heavily concentrated broadcast sector
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Venezuela
Ranked 171st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: United States
Ranked 30th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Freedom of the Press 2014: Mexico
Ranked 132nd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2014 -
Fifth Annual Review of Free Expression in Canada 2013-2014
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 30 April 2014 -
Americas: Annual Report of the Office of the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression 2013
Unknown author — 24 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Venezuela
Newspapers cut back page count as government stops supply of foreign currency to buy newsprint
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Uruguay
President calls own government’s promoted media law a “monstrosity”
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: United States
New York shield law protects journalists from requirement to disclose sources regardless of state jursidiction of crime
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Trinidad and Tobago
Anti-media agressiveness fails to intimadate journalists
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Peru
Judicial harassment and threats of violence increase following reports on corruption and organized crime
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Paraguay
Senate passes Freedom of Information bill
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Panama
Civil lawsuits against media organizations constrain press freedom
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Nicaragua
Authorities fail to comply with own Access to Public Information law
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Mexico
Sixty percent of attacks on journalists carried out by public officials
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Jamaica
Criminal libel abolished under ammended Defamation Act
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Honduras
High levels of impunity and “a climate of lack of safety” lead to journalist self-censorship
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Haiti
Nine suspects indicted for the 2000 murder of journalist, Jean Leopold Dominique
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Guatemala
Two police officers charged with abuse of authority following tear-gassing of 28 journalists
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Grenada
Controversial electonic defamation law passes desipte immense opposition
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: El Salvador
Election propaganda negatively affects news media and press freedom
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Ecuador
Private media firm Secom takes over Freedom of Expression NGOs under Executive Decree 16
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Dominican Republic
Television commentators deemed “trailors of the fatherland” for supporting undocumented workers
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Cuba
Brutal physical assaults of dissidents increase
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Costa Rica
Detention of judicial employee has chilling effect on other press informants
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Colombia
“90 reporters are facing extraordinary risks according to the State Protection Unit”
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Chile
Uncertainty surrounds new media bill
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Canada
Internet surveillance legislation dropped following widespead opposition
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Brazil
“Freedom of expression has drastically deteriorated”
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Bolivia
“Media weakness has become the objective of those in government”
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Barbados
Powerful business leaders increasingly using advertising money to influence editorial decisions
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2014: Argentina
“A fertile year for attacks on journalists and other restrictions of freedom of expression”
Inter American Press Association — 7 April 2014 -
Enemies of the Internet 2014: United States
“NSA symbolises intelligence services’ abuses”
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 12 March 2014 -
Enemies of the Internet 2014: Cuba
“Long Live Freedom (but not for the Internet)!”
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 12 March 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Venezuela
“Sale of Globovisión leaves country without a critical broadcaster”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: United States
“Aggressive leak prosecutions, secret subpoenas, and surveillance have chilling effect”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Peru
“Journalists covering corruption, protests are targeted”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Mexico
“Amid climate of impunity, authorities botch investigations into key cases”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Honduras
“Journalists targeted amid a general climate of rampant violence”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Guatemala
“Critical daily elPeriódico harassed and attacked”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Ecuador
“New communications law gives authorities power to censor, sanction press”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Cuba
“Dissidents allowed to travel abroad for first time in decades”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Colombia
“Impunity prevails for past journalist murders as cases go cold”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Brazil
“Deadly violence” against journalists continues
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
Attacks on the Press in 2013: Argentina
“Conflict between government and critical media companies intensifies”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 11 February 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Venezeula
Ranked 116th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Uruguay
Ranked 26th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: United States
Ranked 46th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Trinidad and Tobago
Ranked 43rd in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Suriname
Ranked 31st in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Peru
Ranked 104th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Paraguay
Ranked 105th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Panama
Ranked 87th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Nicaragua
Ranked 71st in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Argentina
Ranked 55th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Antigua and Barbuda
Ranked 36th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Mexico
Ranked 152nd in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Jamaica
Ranked 17th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Honduras
Ranked 129th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Haiti
Ranked 47th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Guyana
Ranked 67th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Guatemala
Ranked 125th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: El Salvador
Ranked 38th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Ecuador
Ranked 95th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Dominican Republic
Ranked 68th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Cuba
Ranked 170th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Costa Rica
Ranked 21st in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Colombia
Ranked 126th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Chile
Ranked 58th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Canada
Ranked 18th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Brazil
Ranked 111th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Bolivia
Ranked 94th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
World Press Freedom Index 2014: Belize
Ranked 29th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 31 January 2014 -
Honduras: Journalism in the Shadow of Impunity
PEN Canada, PEN International — 23 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Venezuela
“Government has taken aggressive steps to reduce the availability of media outlets that engage in critical programming”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: United States
Snowden leaks reveal secret domestic surveillance program aimed at US citizens
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Honduras
Journalists, peasant activists and LGBTI individuals vulnerable to attacks; government fails to protect
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Haiti
“Human rights defenders face threats of violence”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Guatemala
UN special rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression raise concerns over agression against journalists
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Ecuador
Arbitrary prosecutions and censorship permitted under 2013 Communications Law
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Peru
Government criminalizes denial of terrorist attacks
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Cuba
Government announces expanded internet access, undermines plan with restrictive caveats
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Colombia
“Rights advocates and journalists continue to be targeted for threats and attacks”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Chile
Pinochet-era decree used to stiffle student protests
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Canada
Government lables anti-pipeline activists ‘radicals’; agents of foreign funded interests
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Mexico
Attacks from government officials and criminal groups lead to journalistic self-censorship
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Brazil
Police officers charged with aggravated homicide in deaths of six journalists
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Bolivia
Despite robust public debate, President Morales aggressively criticizes press
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
World Report 2014: Argentina
President accuses media of using ‘bullets of ink’
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 21 January 2014 -
Faces and Traces of Freedom of Expression in Latin America and the Caribbean 2013
IFEX América Latina y el Caribe — 18 November 2013 -
Chilling Effects: NSA Surveillance Drives U.S. Writers to Self-Censor
PEN America — 12 November 2013 -
U.S.: The Obama Administration and the Press
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 10 October 2013 -
Government corruption and impunity: Twin threats to free expression in Mexico
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 8 August 2013 -
Press Freedom Report: Ecuador 2013
International Press Institute (IPI) — 11 July 2013 -
Ecuador defaults on freedom of expression recommendations received during Universal Periodic Review
Fundamedios - Andean Foundation for Media Observation and Study — 31 May 2013 -
Canada: Interactive map of free expression issues from coast to coast
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 23 May 2013 -
CJFE’s 2012/2013 Review of Free Expression in Canada
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 3 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Venezuela
Ranked 168th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Uruguay
Ranked 47th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: United States
Ranked 23rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Trinidad and Tobago
Ranked 47th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Suriname
Ranked 40th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: St Vincent & Grenadines
Ranked 19th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: St Lucia
Ranked 12th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: St Kitts and Nevis
Ranked 29th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Peru
Ranked 89th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Paraguay
Ranked 134th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Panama
Ranked 94th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Nicaragua
Ranked 106th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Mexico
Ranked 134th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Jamaica
Ranked 23rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Honduras
Ranked 140th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Haiti
Ranked 96th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
USA: Who Has Your Back?
Which companies help protect your data from the government?
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Guyana
Ranked 68th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Guatemala
Ranked 128th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Grenada
Ranked 39th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: El Salvador
Ranked 83rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Ecuador
Ranked 134th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Dominican Republic
Ranked 81st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Dominica
Ranked 40th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Cuba
Ranked 191st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Costa Rica
Ranked 23rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Colombia
Ranked 112th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Chile
Ranked 64th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Canada
Ranked 29th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Brazil
Ranked 91st in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Bolivia
Ranked 94th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Belize
Ranked 35th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Barbados
Ranked 23rd in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Bahamas
Ranked 27th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Argentina
Ranked 109th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of the Press 2013: Antigua & Barbuda
Ranked 79th in annual global media freedom report
Freedom House — 1 May 2013 -
Freedom of Expression on the Agenda in Mexico
Freedom House — 26 April 2013 -
Abuse of state power obstructed work of the press during Venezuelan elections
Instituto Prensa y Sociedad de Venezuela — 25 April 2013 -
Americas: ARTICLE 19 supports Plan of Action on access to Environmental Information
ARTICLE 19 — 18 April 2013 -
Canada: Private Bill C-461 threatens CBC journalistic integrity and protection of sources
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 21 March 2013 -
Mexico: Serious crimes against free expression in 2012
ARTICLE 19 — 14 March 2013 -
Brazil: Special Report “Women on the Internet”
ARTICLE 19 — 8 March 2013 -
The Zacatecas, Mexico Rules: Cartel’s Reign Cannot Be Covered
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2013 -
Digital and Mobile Security for Mexican Journalists and Bloggers
Freedom House — 15 February 2013 -
One year after journalist killing on Brazil’s border, no justice in sight
International Press Institute (IPI) — 14 February 2013 -
Those Who Take Us Away: Abusive Policing and Failures in Protection of Indigenous Women and Girls in Northern British Columbia, Canada
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 13 February 2013 -
A HOLLOW RIGHT: Access to information in crisis in Canada
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression — 31 January 2013 -
Brazil, the country of 30 Berlusconis
The report examines all of the shortcomings of this South American giant’s media landscape It is based on fact-finding visits to Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Brasilia in November 2012.
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 24 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Mexico
“The security environment for journalists has deteriorated markedly”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Jamaica
“While newspapers are independent and free of government control, circulation is generally low”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Honduras
“The second most dangerous country in the world for journalists”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Haiti
“Threats against and illegal arrests of civil society leaders increased during the year”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Guyana
Police kill three protesters during a protest against high electricity prices
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Guatemala
“Scholars have received death threats for questioning past human rights abuses or continuing injustices”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Grenada
Grenada becomes first Caribbean country to decriminalise defamation
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: El Salvador
“The government and private organisations have worked to extend Internet access to the poor”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Dominica
“The country lacks access to information legislation, and defamation remains a criminal offense punishable by imprisonment or fines”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Cuba
“There are an estimated 70 independent, journalistic bloggers working on the island”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Costa Rica
Government uses advertising to influence media content
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Colombia
“Twitter and other social media platforms have become important arenas of political discourse”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Chile
“In 2012, many members of the press were detained and harassed by the police while covering student protests”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Canada
“Media ownership continued to become more concentrated in 2012”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Venezuela
Twitter accounts of journalists and opposition activists hacked to disseminate pro-government messages
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: United States
“Congressional efforts in 2012 to adopt legislation to prevent copyright infringement on the Internet were shelved in response to strong opposition from leading Internet companies, websites, and ordinary users”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Brazil
Long-awaited freedom of information bill goes into effect
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Bolivia
Criticising government officials decriminalised in October
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Belize
“Concerns over government control of the broadcast industry remain after the attempted nationalisation of Telemedia”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Trinidad and Tobago
“Press outlets are privately owned and vigorously pluralistic”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Barbados
Rastafarian community faces discrimination in education and employment
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Saint Kitts and Nevis
Prime Minister voices support for Freedom of Information legislation
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Puerto Rico
“Puerto Rico’s tradition of varied and vigorous news media has been challenged by a decline in newspapers stemming from the economic crisis”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Bahamas
“The Bahamas has a well-developed tradition of respecting press freedom”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Suriname
“Public access to government information is legally recognised, though it is very limited in practice”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Saint Vincent and Grenadines
“Government officials use libel lawsuits against members of the media”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Argentina
“The administration carried out smear campaigns against critical journalists” in 2012
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Peru
“Low pay leaves reporters susceptible to bribery”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Saint Lucia
“The constitution guarantees freedom of speech, which is respected in practice”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Antigua and Barbuda
“Politicians often file libel suits against opposing party members”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Paraguay
“In 2012, journalists investigating corruption and organized crime or who were vocally critical of the government suffered threats and violent attacks by drug cartels, government officials, and the EPP”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Panama
Journalists subject of government attack ads
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Freedom in the World 2013: Nicaragua
“The Ortega administration engages in systematic efforts to obstruct and discredit media critics”
Freedom House — 16 January 2013 -
Faces and Traces of Freedom of Expression in Latin America and the Caribbean 2012
IFEX América Latina y el Caribe — 23 November 2012 -
A Death Threat to Freedom: A Report on Violence Against Mexico’s Press
World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers — 4 September 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Argentina
Newsprint regulation, Law 26,736, will bring a “dark precedents for press freedom”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Bolivia
President regards media as his main opponents, claims they wish to destabilise administration
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Brazil
“Sluggish” Brazilian judicial system leads to impunity for murdered journalists and delays in censorship appeals
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Canada
Government under fire for delaying timely access to federally-funded scientific research
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Chile
Fears rise that new hate speech legislation could hinder freedom of expression
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Colombia
New legislation curtails media’s ability to cover elections
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Costa Rica
President Chinchilla delays passage of Freedom of Expression and Press Freedom bill
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Cuba
Blogger Yoani Sánchez named one of “150 women who rocked the world” in 2012 by Newsweek magazine
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Dominican Republic
National Council for State Reform and Education Ministry begin nationwide educational campaign to promote access to information
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Ecuador
Three laws passed that restrict press freedom
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: El Salvador
Penal code amended to remove prison terms for defamation and libel
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Guatemala
Columnist and radio announcer Lucía Escobar forced into exile after reporting on Security Commission abuses against civilians
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Haiti
“The head of state never misses an opportunity to attack the media”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Honduras
“Impunity surrounding crimes against journalists”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Mexico
Defamation and libel decriminalised
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Nicaragua
“Government party maintains iron-fisted control over information and advertising through numerous government-owned media outlets”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Panama
President accuses media of blackmailing government ministers
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Paraguay
“Since the administration of President Fernando Lugo there has been an increase in attacks on the press”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Peru
Journalists attacked for revealing that “police had been extorting smugglers and drug traffickers who operate in the border area between Peru and Bolivia”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Puerto Rico
President of Puerto Rican Senate to journalists, “I’m watching you”
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Suriname
Amnesty law for crimes against humanity leads to indefinite impunity for five murdered reporters
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Trinidad and Tobago
Police use search-and-seizure order to confiscate computer equipment from Newsday following a request to disclose source of controversial report on Integrity Commissioner
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Uruguay
“Sporadic explosions of bad temper” by President Mujica cause interference in journalists’ work
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: United States
Soldier Bradley Manning faces charges under Espionage Act that could lead to death penalty for allegedly supplying info to Wikileaks
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
Midyear Meeting Report 2012: Venezuela
Social Responsibility law used to force closure of 32 radio and two television stations
Inter American Press Association — 23 April 2012 -
The Enemies of the Internet 2012: Cuba
Pro-regime bloggers wage non-stop on-line battle against bloggers critical of government
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 12 March 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Argentina
Federal Court sentences 16 military members in decades-old murder of journalist Rodolfo Walsh
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Brazil
“In the first half of 2011, Brazilian authorities issued 224 takedown orders to Google, more than any other country in the world”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Cuba
29 independent journalists imprisoned in 2003 Black Spring crackdown released
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Colombia
Five former national intelligence officials convicted of espionage against journalists and opposition politicians
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Honduras
Five media facilities occupied by military in 2011
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Mexico
New protection program for journalists “ineffectual at best”
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: United States of America
State Department falls short in its implementation of Daniel Pearl Freedom of the Press Act
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Attacks on the Press in 2011: Venezuela
Hacker group N33 attacks twitter accounts of journalists critical of Chavez administration
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — 21 February 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Venezuela
Ranked 117th on annual press freedom index for lack of media pluralism, judicial harassment and physical attacks against journalists
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: United States
US drops 27 places to 47th in annual press freedom review following numerous attacks on journalists covering Occupy Protests
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Trinidad and Tobago
State espionage of journalists leads to country’s 20 point fall in annual review of press freedom
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Guyana
“Radio broadcasting is still a state monopoly”
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Haiti
Rising political tensions have no negative consequences for press freedom
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Argentina
Little change in press freedom situation as nation ties for 47th place on annual index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Peru
“Peru, notorious for the frequency of attacks on the press”
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Panama
Two Spanish journalists expelled for reporting on indigenous resistance movement
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Honduras
Honduras “languished at the bottom” of annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Guatemala
Media suffer from impact of violent crime, habitual self-censorship and lack of pluralism
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: El Salvador
Decreased incidents of assault lead to 14 place rise to 37th position on annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Dominican Republic
Ranked 95th in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Uruguay
Ranked 32nd in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Costa Rica
Highest ranking Latin American nation on annual free expression index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Colombia
Ranked 143rd in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Suriname
Surinam rises 13 positions to 22nd place on annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Chile
Student protestors raise concern over media concentration
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Jamaica
Lack of violent attacks leads Jamaica to 16th place on annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Canada
Canada recovers hemisphere’s best rating in 2011 press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Brazil
Brazil falls 41 positions to 99th place in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Paraguay
Nation falls 26 places to 80th position in annual press freedom index as journalists face increased violence
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Nicaragua
Political polarisation has little effect on work of journalists
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Ecuador
Issues of balance and pluralism, judicial harassment plague nation
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Cuba
Lowest-ranking nation in Americas in annual press freedom index
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Mexico
“Netizens who take a stand against the prevailing violence are now also becoming the targets for killings and reprisals”
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
Press Freedom Index 2011-2012: Bolivia
Little changes in Bolivian press freedom environment
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) — 25 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Peru
Government introduces legislation to decriminalise defamation
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Mexico
“A climate of impunity and self-censorship”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Honduras
Three journalists killed in 2011 “at the hands of unidentified attackers”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Ecuador
President accuses free expression NGO Fundamedios of “trying to destabilise his government”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Cuba
“The government maintains a media monopoly on the island, ensuring there is virtually no freedom of expression”
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Brazil
Radio journalist shot for reporting on corruption by local government officials, fifth journalist killed in 2011
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Bolivia
Fears rise that anti-racism law could have a chilling effect on the press
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Argentina
Supreme Courts curtails government practise of rewarding supportive media with state advertising contracts
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
World Report 2012: Venezuela
Expansion of desacato laws, which criminalise “disrespect of public officials,” lead to a climate of self-censorship
Human Rights Watch (HRW) — 22 January 2012 -
VIDEO: IFEX-ALC Advocacy Campaign in Geneva at the Universal Periodic Review of Venezuela 2011
IFEX América Latina y el Caribe — 18 September 2011
For the Immediate Release of Journalists and Media Workers Imprisoned in Venezuela
Eight people are detained by Nicolás Maduro’s government for carrying out their journalistic duties.
X blocked in Brazil: When a social media platform opposes the rule of law
Given social media’s role in the spread of disinformation, no democracy can afford to allow these platforms to shirk their legal obligations.
Nicaragua deports 135 political prisoners, including journalist Victor Ticay
“Nicaragua’s release of journalist Víctor Ticay brings us relief, but he should have never been imprisoned, as he was simply doing his job as a journalist” – CPJ
Over 90 rights groups call on US to make effective use of Global Magnitsky sanctions
“The unique power of Global Magnitsky sanctions greatly relies on the fact that this particular tool has a specific purpose – to condemn and hold accountable perpetrators of the world’s worst abuses.”
Report documents gag on free expression and the press in Nicaragua
The report documents increasing violations of freedom of expression and press, as well as a rise in attacks against journalists, activists, media outlets, students, clergy, artists, and political opponents, among other actors.
In preparing for protests, are campuses in the United States going too far?
“All too often, universities have appeared to be enacting double standards, clamping down on pro-Palestinian speech more than speech on other issues.”
Authorities must urgently protect reporters from escalation in violence in Ecuador
Since the end of July, RSF has recorded at least six cases of attacks on journalists investigating the corruption surrounding the security crisis linked to the rise of organized crime in the country.
Venezuelans use AI avatars and Instagram Live to fight back against Maduro’s repression
President Nicolás Maduro’s regime has increased surveillance, persecuted political dissent, and blocked the flow of information online. Venezuelan journalists, activists and political dissidents are looking for ways to circumvent and report the abuse.
State repression intensifies in post-elections Venezuela, dangerous legislative changes in Uruguay
August in the Americas: A free expression and civic space round-up produced by IFEX’s Regional Editor Laura Vidal, based on IFEX member reports and news from the region.
Colombia’s president to create direct communication channel with RSF and FLIP on cases of violence against journalists
“It is very positive that President Petro is directly involving his office in addressing serious attacks against media professionals. This will allow the state to respond quickly to save lives and will send a clear message to assailants across the country about the fight against impunity for violence against journalists.”
Venezuela: RSF counts 70 violations of press freedom in 15 days
Both national and foreign journalists face a climate of hostility and repression, marked by arbitrary arrests, threats, physical attacks, censorship and restrictions on information access. RSF strongly condemns these violations and demands immediate restoration of journalists’ rights.
Tip of the iceberg: The political influence industry In Canada
OpenMedia’s research report sheds light on dozens of secretive businesses that handle people’s sensitive voting behaviour data on behalf of federal political parties in Canada – with few effective rules limiting their actions.
IAPA concerned about potential outcome of lawsuits against “La Prensa” in Panama
The numerous lawsuits facing La Prensa Corporation in Panama could suffocate the viability of that media company, resulting in a negative impact on freedom of expression in the country.
Open letter on technology-enabled political violence in Venezuela
We, the undersigned organizations and members of the global human rights community, urgently call for unfettered access to the internet, social media platforms, and other communication channels for the people in Venezuela at all times. We also demand an end to the use of technological tools and digital platforms for the surveillance and persecution of political dissent, particularly in the wake of the presidential elections of July 28. This commitment is crucial to respect the rights enshrined in Venezuela’s Constitution and the country’s international commitments.
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