CLOSE

Our Journalist Impact Survey 2021

Our Journalist Impact Survey 2021
“I would have been jailed for a year as I was unable to pay.” Journalist supported by Media Defence in 2021.

 

In 2021, we carried out our fifth annual Journalist Impact Survey to look at the longer-term impact of our support on our primary beneficiaries: journalists. We designed our Journalist Impact Survey to understand the quality of our legal and financial support to journalists. In addition, it allows us to gain a greater appreciation of the role of legal defence in ensuring journalists can continue to report. Finally, the survey allows us to test our theory of change: access to legal defence enables journalists to continue reporting and holding governments and authorities to account for the public. As a result, these findings inform our future casework.

The Results

In 2021, we received 31 responses from journalists whose cases we have supported, and which ended in 2021. This is up from 21 responses in 2020, and is much more geographically-spread than in previous years, where 90% respondents came from the EU.

Key findings include:

  • 68% of respondents reported feeling satisfied with the outcome of their case
  • 100% of respondents would recommend our support to other journalists facing legal action; and
  • 84% of respondents reported feeling satisfied or extremely satisfied with the lawyer who handled their case.

The survey found that our support and that of our partners was incredibly effective. For over 80% of respondents, this support enabled them to continue reporting on public interest issues. For some journalists, this need for support was acute. As one respondent expressed, “[without Media Defence’s support] I would have been in prison by now.”

Read the full report here.

To see last year’s Journalist Impact Survey, click here.

If you are a journalist in need of support, please click here.

Recent News

World Press Freedom Day Side Event: Profiling and surveillance, a renewed challenge to freedom of expression

From May 2-4 2024, UNESCO and the government of Chile will host the 31st edition of World Press Freedom Day in Santiago. The global commemorative conference commemorates the vital role of journalism and information access in fostering a sustainable future that upholds diversity of voices. Media Defence is organising a side event at the conference […]

Read

Landmark Ruling: Kenya’s High Court Declares Colonial-era Subversion Laws Unconstitutional

Media Defence welcomes the verdict of the High Court in Nakuru, striking down sections of the Kenyan Penal Code which criminalise subversion, citing them as relics of colonial oppression that curtail freedom of expression. Justice Samwel Mohochi, delivering the judgment, asserted that these provisions were overly broad and vague, stifling dissent rather than serving any […]

Read

UN Rapporteurs Call for Protection of Brazilian Journalist Schirlei Alves

UN Rapporteurs Call for Protection of Brazilian Journalist Schirlei Alves Amid Defamation Charges Stemming from Rape Trial Coverage A letter dispatched by UN rapporteurs to the Brazilian Government calls for protective measures for women journalists covering cases of sexual crimes. The letter also denounces the conviction of Brazilian investigative journalist and women’s rights defender, Schirlei […]

Read