PEOPLE'S COMMUNICATION CHARTER
APPROVED AT THE FOUNDING
Convention of the Cultural Environment Movement
(CEM www.cemnet.org ) St. Louis (USA), 17 March 1996.
We, the Signatories of this
Charter, recognize that:
Communication is basic to today's life for all individuals and
their communities. All people are entitled to participate in
communication, and in making decisions about communication within
and between societies. The majority of the world's peoples lack
minimal technological resources for survival and communication.
Over half of them have not yet made a single telephone call.
Commercialization of media and concentration of media ownership
erode the public sphere and fail to provide for cultural and
information needs, including the plurality of opinions and the
diversity of cultural expressions and languages necessary for
democracy. Massive and pervasive media violence polarizes
societies, exacerbates conflict, and cultivates fear and
mistrust, making people vulnerable and dependent. Stereotypical
portrayals misrepresent all of us and stigmatize those who are
the most vulnerable. Therefore, we ratify this Charter defining
communication rights and responsibilities to be observed in
democratic countries and in international law.
Article 1. Respect:
All people are entitled to be treated with respect, according to
the basic human rights standards of dignity, integrity, identity
and non-discrimination.
Article 2. Freedom:
All people have the right of access to communication channels
independent of governmental or commercial control.
Article 3. Access: In
order to exercise their rights, people should have fair and
equitable access to local and global resources and facilities for
conventional and advanced channels of communication; to receive
opinions, information and ideas in a language they normally use
and understand; to receive a range of cultural products designed
for a wide variety of tastes and interests; and to have easy
access to facts about ownership of media and sources of
information. Restrictions on access to information should be
permissible only for good and compelling reasons, as when
prescribed by international human rights standards or necessary
for the protection of a democratic society or the basic rights of
others.
Article 4. Independence:
The realization of people's right to participate in, contribute
to and benefit from the development of self-reliant communication
structures requires international assistance to the development
of independent media; training programs for professional media
workers; the establishment of independent, representative
associations, syndicates or trade unions of journalists and
associations of editors and publishers; and the adoption of
international standards.
Article 5. Literacy: All
people have the right to acquire information and skills necessary
to participate fully in public deliberation and communication.
This requires facility in reading, writing and storytelling;
critical media awareness; computer literacy; and education about
the role of communication in society.
Article 6. Protection of Journalists:
Journalists must be accorded full protection of the law,
including international humanitarian law, especially in areas of
armed conflict. They must have safe, unrestricted access to
sources of information, and must be able to seek remedy, when
required, through an international body.
Article 7. Right of Reply and Redress:
All people have the right of reply and to demand penalties for
damage from media misinformation. Individuals concerned should
have an opportunity to correct, without undue delay, statements
relating to them which they have a justified interest in having
corrected.
Such corrections should be given the same
prominence as the original expression. States should impose
penalties for proven damage or require corrections, where a court
of law has determined that an information provider has wilfully
disseminated inaccurate or misleading and damaging information,
or has facilitated the dissemination of such information.
Article 8. Cultural Identity:
All people have the right to protect their cultural identity.
This includes the respect for people's pursuit of their cultural
development and the right to free expression in languages they
understand. People's right to the protection of their cultural
space and heritage should not violate other human rights or
provisions of this Charter.
Article 9. Diversity of Languages:
All people have the right to a diversity of languages. This
includes the right to express themselves and have access to
information in their own language, the right to use their own
languages in educational institutions funded by the state, and
the right to have adequate provisions created for the use of
minority languages where needed.
Article 10. Participation in Policy Making:
All people have the right to participate in public
decision-making about the provision of information; the
development and utilization of knowledge; the preservation,
protection and development of culture; the choice and application
of communication technologies; and the structure and policies of
media industries.
Article 11. Children's Rights: Children
have the right to mass media products that are designed to meet
their needs and interests and foster their healthy physical,
mental and emotional development. They should be protected from
harmful media products and from commercial and other exploitation
at home, in school and at places of play, work or business.
Nations should take steps to produce and distribute widely high
quality cultural and entertainment materials created for children
in their own languages.
Article 12. Cyberspace:
All people have a right to universal access to and equitable use
of cyberspace. Their rights to free and open communities in
cyberspace, their freedom of electronic expression, and their
freedom from electronic surveillance and intrusion should be
protected.
Article 13. Privacy:
All people have the right to be protected from the publication of
allegations irrelevant to the public interest, or of private
photographs or other private communication without authorization,
or of personal information given or received in confidence.
Databases should not be used for unauthorized commercial or
general surveillance purposes. However, nations should take care
that the protection of privacy does not unduly interfere with the
freedom of expression or the administration of justice.
Article 14. Harm:
People have the right to demand that media actively counter
incitement to hate, prejudice, violence and war. Violence should
not be presented as normal, 'manly' or entertaining, and true
consequences of and alternatives to violence should be shown.
Other violations of human dignity and integrity to be avoided
include sterotypic images that distort the realities and
complexities of people's lives. Media should not ridicule,
stigmatize, or demonize people on the basis of gender, race,
class, ethnicity, language, sexual orientation and physical or
mental condition.
Article 15. Justice:
People have the right to demand that media respect standards of
due process in the coverage of trials. This implies that the
media should not presume guilt before a verdict of guilt, invade
the privacy of defendants, and should not televise criminal
trials in real time, while the trial is in progress.
Article 16. Consumption:
People have the right to useful and factual consumer information
and to be protected against misleading and distorted information.
Media should avoid and if necessary, expose promotion disguised
as news and entertainment (infomercials, product placement,
children's programs that use franchised characters and toys,
etc.), and the creation of wasteful, unnecessary, harmful or
ecologically damaging needs, wants, products and activities.
Advertising directed at children should receive special scrutiny.
Article 17. Accountability:
People have the right to hold media accountable to the general
public and their adherence to the standards established in this
Charter. For that purpose, media should establish mechanisms,
including self-regulatory bodies, that monitor and account for
measures taken to achieve compliance.
Article 18. Implementation:
In consultation with the Signatories, national and international
mechanisms will be organized to publicize this Charter; to
implement it in as many countries as possible and in
international law; monitor and assess the performance of
countries and media in light of these Standards; receive
complaints about violations; advise on adequate remedial
measures; and to establish procedures for periodic review,
development and modification of this Charter.