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Charlie Beckett

July 5th, 2011

After the News of the World admit hacking Milly Dowler’s Phone We Need A Media Commission – Not Self-Regulation

2 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Charlie Beckett

July 5th, 2011

After the News of the World admit hacking Milly Dowler’s Phone We Need A Media Commission – Not Self-Regulation

2 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Damian Tambini LSE

This article by Damian Tambini appeared first on the LSE Media Policy Blog

The phone hacking scandal (among other challenges) is now seriously underming the legitimacy of the PCC.  Independent owner Evgeny Lebedev’s article in the Guardian  is the latest in a long line of heavyweight comments that question the efficacy of the self regulatory body for the UK press.

But Jeremy Hunt appears to have missed a golden opportunity to fix this problem. The BskyB – News International deal could have enabled him to strike a new compact and ensure that the UK’s dominant commercial news provider engages with an independent media commission that would discuss the cross media issues of accountability and standards that are raised by the phone hacking affair.

I argued back in January that Jeremy Hunt ” could play a masterstroke by persuading News Corp to accept a new regulatory settlement that would not only raise a higher impartiality bar for Sky – addressing agenda setting concerns, but would act decisively to change what is clearly a problematic regime at the newspaper titles and the PCC.”

When big structural changes threaten the subtle separation of powers between government, parliament and the media the traditional way of dealing with this in the UK is for an independent commission to be set up to offer advice on how to reform regulation and self-regulation. We have had Royal Commissions on the Press and independent reports on broadcasting every decade or two, as well as a welter of Parliamentary Committee Inquiries.

Lebedev’s own suggestion – that he lead the owners in a debate about the future of self regulation will not convince anybody, because industry led self regulation has already failed. Mediapolicy.org’s suggestion yesterday that we are at one of those historical moments that require formal, public-led discussion is timely.

This article by Damian Tambini appeared first on the LSE Media Policy Blog

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Charlie Beckett

Posted In: Journalism

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