openDemocracyUK

Media reform in the UK

In the wake of the phone hacking scandal, ourKingdom launches a joint initiative to debate the critical issues surrounding the future of the British media.
Anthony Barnett Sunny cropped.jpg
Anthony Barnett Sunny Hundal Mark Pack Will Straw
8 August 2011

July 2011 will be remembered as one of those rare moments where the nation came together in shared outrage and disgust. The hacking of Milly Dowler shocked the country and led to a series of unprecedented events which would have seemed inconceivable just weeks before. The drama culminated in the resignation and arrest of several News International executives and senior police officers; the termination of a 168-year old national newspaper; and the appearance of a humbled Rupert Murdoch before a public hearing.

The various enquiries by Lord Justice Leveson, the Metropolitan police, and the Commons' culture select committee will take months and possibly years to conclude. But it will then be the business of Parliament to determine how the rules and laws governing the media in our country should change.

The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), ourKingdom (The British section of openDemocracy), Liberal Conspiracy (the non-aligned website of the left), and Liberal Democrat Voice have come together to start a debate on these critical issues. Over the next four weeks we will look in turn at media plurality, privacy, regulation, and democracy.

This week we ask: How can we secure greater plurality in media ownership? Would greater plurality advance the public interest or not? How could it be achieved? Is a different and better structure of ownership of the print media possible?

From August 15th, we turn to: How can we better protect individual privacy whilst preventing powerful corporate, individual or state interests from inhibiting investigative journalism? 

From August 22nd: What is the best way of regulating the press in the broad public interest if we don't want the state to license or control journalism?

And finally from August 30th: How can we strengthen our democracy to prevent symbiotic concentrations of power in politics, the media and agencies of public authority, such as the police?

If you wish to write a short blog (up to 600 words) on any of these topics, please contact the editors of any of these sites and ask to contribute.

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You can click on any of these links to email IPPR, ourKingdomLibCon or LibDemVoice. Or, if you want to write your own contribution on your own website, please let us know so we can link to it. We are aware that Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland have their own non-London media, and their views and experience are important.  Our aim is to both help release and to bring together the energy and diversity of radical thinking across the web in the UK to take advantage of this rare moment.

Who is bankrolling Britain's democracy? Which groups shape the stories we see in the press; which voices are silenced, and why? Sign up here to find out.

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