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17 Tips: What
A Peace Journalist Would Try To Do
1
1
AVOID portraying a conflict as consisting of only two parties contesting
one goal. The logical outcome is for one to win and the other to
lose. INSTEAD, a Peace Journalist would DISAGGREGATE the two parties
into many smaller groups, pursuing many goals, opening up more creative
potential for a range of outcomes.
2
AVOID accepting stark distinctions between "self" and
"other." These can be used to build the sense that another
party is a "threat" or "beyond the pale" of
civilized behavior < both key justifications for violence. INSTEAD,
seek the "other" in the "self" and vice versa.
If a party is presenting itself as "the goodies," ask
questions about how different its behavior really is to that it
ascribes to "the baddies" - isn't it ashamed of itself?
3 AVOID
treating a conflict as if it is only going on in the place and at
the time that violence is occurring. INSTEAD, try to trace the links
and consequences for people in other places now and in the future.
Ask:
- Who are all
the people with a stake in the outcome?
- Ask yourself
what will happen if ...?
- What lessons
will people draw from watching these events unfold as part of
a global audience? How will they enter the calculations of parties
to future conflicts
near and far?
4 AVOID
assessing the merits of a violent action or policy of violence in
terms of its visible effects only. INSTEAD, try to find ways of
reporting on the invisible effects, e.g., the long-term consequences
of psychological damage and trauma, perhaps increasing the likelihood
that those affected will be violent in future, either against other
people or, as a group, against other groups or other countries.
5
AVOID letting parties define themselves by simply quoting their
leaders' restatement of familiar demands or positions. INSTEAD,
inquire more deeply into goals:
- How are people
on the ground affected by the conflict in everyday life?
- What do they
want changed?
- Is the position
stated by their leaders the only way or the best way to achieve
the changes
they want?
6
AVOID concentrating always on what divides the parties, the differences
between what they say they want. INSTEAD, try asking questions that
may reveal areas of common ground and leading your report with answers
which suggest some goals maybe shared or at least compatible, after
all.
7 AVOID
only reporting the violent acts and describing "the horror."
If you exclude everything else, you suggest that the only explanation
for violence is previous violence (revenge); the only remedy, more
violence (coercion/punishment). INSTEAD, show how people have been
blocked and frustrated or deprived in everyday life as a way of
explaining the violence.
8
AVOID blaming someone for starting it. INSTEAD, try looking at how
shared problems and issues are leading to consequences that all
the parties say they never intended.
9
AVOID focusing exclusively on the suffering, fears and grievances
of only one party. This divides the parties into "villains"
and "victims" and suggests that coercing or punishing
the villains represents a solution. INSTEAD, treat as equally newsworthy
the suffering, fears and grievance of all sides.
10
AVOID "victimizing" language such as "destitute,"
"devastated," "defenseless," "pathetic"
and "tragedy," which only tells us what has been done
to and could be done for a group of people. This disempowers them
and limits the options for change. INSTEAD,
report on what has been done and could be done by the people. Don't
just ask them how they feel, also ask them how they are coping and
what do they think? Can they suggest any solutions? Remember refugees
have surnames as well. You wouldn't call President Clinton "Bill"
in a news report.
11
AVOID imprecise use of emotive words to describe what has happened
to people.
- "Genocide"
means the wiping out of an entire people.
- "Decimated"
(said of a population) means reducing it to a tenth of its former
size.
- "Tragedy"
is a form of drama, originally Greek, in which someone's fault
or weakness proves his or her undoing.
- "Assassination"
is the murder of a head of state.
- "Massacre"
is the deliberate killing of people known to be unarmed and defenseless.
Are we sure? Or might these people have died in battle?
- "Systematic"
e.g., raping or forcing people from their homes. Has it really
been organized in a deliberate pattern or have there been a number
of unrelated, albeit extremely nasty incidents?
INSTEAD, always
be precise about what we know. Do not minimize suffering but reserve
the strongest language for the gravest situations or you will beggar
the language and help to justify disproportionate responses that
escalate the violence.
12 AVOID
demonizing adjectives like "vicious," "cruel,"
"brutal" and "barbaric." These always describe
one party's view of what another party has done. To use them puts
the journalist on that side and helps to justify an escalation of
violence. INSTEAD, report what you know about the wrongdoing and
give as much information as you can about the reliability of other
people's reports or descriptions of it.
13
AVOID demonizing labels like "terrorist," "extremist,"
"fanatic" and "fundamentalist." These are always
given by "us" to "them." No one ever uses them
to describe himself or herself, and so, for a journalist to use
them is always to take sides. They mean the person is unreasonable,
so it seems to make less sense to reason (negotiate) with them.
INSTEAD,
try calling people by the names they give themselves. Or be more
precise in your descriptions.
14
AVOID focusing exclusively on the human rights abuses, misdemeanors
and wrong doings of only one side. INSTEAD, try to name ALL wrongdoers
and treat equally seriously allegations made by all sides in a conflict.
Treating seriously does not mean taking at face value, but instead
making equal efforts to establish whether any evidence exists to
back them up, treating the victims with equal respect and the chances
of finding and punishing the wrongdoers as being of equal importance.
15
AVOID making an opinion or claim seem like an established fact.
("Eurico Guterres, said to be responsible for a massacre in
East Timor _") INSTEAD, tell your readers or your audience
who said what. ("Eurico Guterres, accused by a top U.N. official
of ordering a massacre in East Timor _") That way you avoid
signing yourself and your news service up to the allegations made
by one party in the conflict against another.
16
AVOID greeting the signing of documents by leaders, which bring
about military victory or cease fire, as necessarily creating peace.
INSTEAD, try to report on the issues which remain and which may
still lead people to commit further acts of violence in the future.
Ask what is being done to strengthen means on the ground to handle
and resolve conflict nonviolently, to address development or structural
needs in the society and to create a culture of peace?
17 AVOID
waiting for leaders on "our" side to suggest or offer
solutions. INSTEAD, pick up and explore peace initiatives wherever
they come from. Ask questions to ministers, for example, about ideas
put forward by grassroots organizations. Assess peace perspectives
against what you know about the issues the parties are really trying
to address. Do not simply ignore them because they do not coincide
with established positions.
1.
From Peace Journalism - How To Do It, by Jake Lynch 2
and Annabel McGoldrick (annabelmcg@aol.com), written Sydney, 2000.
2. Jake Lynch is a correspondent for Sky News and The Independent
based in London and Sydney. He is a consultant to the POIESIS Conflict
and Peace Forums and co-author of "The Peace Journalism Option"
and "What Are Journalists For?"
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