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- Here's a short article excerpted from my upcoming book tentatively
- entitled "Communication in Peace and War" (Brooks-Cole, 1992).
-
- "Media Performance and International Law"
- by Howard H. Frederick, Ph.D.
-
- Events since the end of the Cold War have shown that the old order
- must be replaced with a new international order. But the world community
- must seize the time to create a its own new order to prevent the unipolar
- power from doing so. That new world order requires broad acceptance of the
- rule of law and should conform to the principles and purposes of only one
- institution: the United Nations and its Charter.
-
- A truly democratic "preferred" world order depends heavily on the
- global information channels. Communication media do not merely report
- violations and victories of human rights. There is also a growing
- realization that communication and information are central to human rights.
- What is worse, the media have often played a role in exacerbating tensions.
- Today the media face the challenge of how to bring about peace, build
- confidence among nations and strengthen international understanding.
-
- International communication and information law comprises those legal
- institutions, instruments and processes that govern communication among and
- between individuals, peoples, cultures, nations and technologies. It is
- found throughout the legal instruments on human rights, international
- security, telecommunications, postal service, outer space, intellectual
- property, trade and customs regulation, and culture and education. In this
- article we briefly sketch media norms on human rights and summarize the
- entire body of law in thirteen basic norms for media performance under
- international law.
-
- Oft-overlooked by the media themselves, a vast body of international
- law regulates what is increasingly being called "international information
- relations." Indeed, nations have obeyed the international law of
- communication and information for more than a century. Every time a new
- innovation in communication technology appears, international law arises to
- regulate it. Gutenberg's invention of the printing press led John Milton
- to call for a "right to freedom of expression." Morse's discovery of the
- telegraph led to the creation of the International Telegraph Convention.
- The development of wireless radio led quickly to the International Radio
- Telegraph Convention. The "radio wars" of the 1930s led to the famous
- <it>International Convention Concerning the Use of Broadcasting in the
- Cause of Peace<it>.
-
- One perplexing question comes to mind when we speak of the media. Can
- international law be applied to private media firms and individual
- communicators? States themselves are of course the subjects of
- international law; State-controlled or State-financed mass media (e.g.
- government broadcasting stations) are necessarily included here. Private
- media were traditionally not subjects of international law. But From
- Article 26 of the 1969 <it>Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties<it>, we
- can deduce that States today have general obligations in the sphere of
- international law which they cannot evade by pointing to domestic laws.
- The manner in which international law is enforced on private media is a
- matter of a state's sovereign prerogative. If international law prohibits
- propaganda for war or racism, the State has an obligation to regulate the
- private media in this regard.
-
- One instance of a professional communicator being the subject of
- international law was the Nazi propagandist, Julius Streicher, editor of
- the anti-semitic newspaper <un>Der Stuermer<un>. He was accused of crimes
- against humanity under the 1945 <it>Charter of the International Military
- Tribunal<it>, the so-called Nuremberg Tribunal, which had the power to try
- and punish Axis soldiers who committed crimes against peace, war crimes,
- and crimes against humanity. The Nuremberg judges interpreted "crimes
- against humanity" to include propaganda and incitement to genocide. The
- Court determined that for more than twenty-five years Streicher had engaged
- in writing and preaching anti-Semitism and had called for the extermination
- of the Jewish people in 1938. Based on a content analysis of articles from
- <un>Der Stuermer<un>, the judges further determined that Streicher had
- aroused the German people to active persecution of the Jewish people. The
- International Military Tribunal found Streicher guilty and condemned him to
- death by hanging.
-
- ________________________________________________
- MAJOR DOCUMENTS OF THE
- INTERNATIONAL LAW OF
- COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION
- ________________________________________________
-
- When we examine the Charter and the many instruments that constitute
- international communication and information law, we find thirteen basic
- principles on media performance.
-
- <bo>Communications media may not be used for war and aggression<bo>.
- The universally respected principle that prohibits the threat or use of
- force by one State against another forbids not only war of aggression but
- also propaganda for wars of aggression. This means that propaganda
- glorifying the threat or use of force in international relations is
- prohibited by law. States are forbidden from spreading warmongering
- content themselves, e.g. through government-owned and -operated
- international radio stations. They are also obligated to stop any war
- propaganda emanating from their territory by private groups.
-
- <bo>Communications media shall not be used to intervene in the
- internal affairs of another State<bo>. This principle forbids all forms of
- interference or attempted threats against a State or against its political,
- economic and cultural elements. This includes organizing, assisting,
- fomenting, financing, inciting or tolerating subversive information
- activities directed towards the overthrow of another state, or interfering
- in civil strife in another state. It also bans systemically undermining
- public support for the opponent's inner cohesion, gradually putting another
- country's state leadership in a state of uncertainly and discouragement,
- diminishing its ability to act under the pressure of a national public
- opinion undergoing a process of reorientation. This principle prohibits
- subversive foreign broadcasts which attempt to change another country's
- governing system or which try to foment discontent and incite unrest.
-
- <bo>All dissemination of ideas based on racial superiority or hatred,
- incitement to racial discrimination are punishable by law<bo>. This
- principle forbids the information activities of all organizations based on
- ideas or theories of superiority of one race or group of persons of one
- color or ethnic origin, or which attempt to justify or promote racial
- hatred, discrimination in any form. Binding international law prohibits
- all dissemination of these ideas as well as all organizations which promote
- and incite racial discrimination. It is a crime against humanity to
- directly abet, encourage or cooperate in the commission of racial
- discrimination.
-
- <bo>The direct and public incitement to destroy a national, ethnic,
- racial or religious group is punishable by law<bo>. This includes using
- the media to incite another person to destroy in whole or in part, a
- national, ethnic, racial or religious group. As the Nuremberg Tribunal set
- out, crimes against humanity include "murder, extermination, enslavement,
- deportation, and other inhuman acts performed against any civilian
- population prior to or during the war."
-
- <bo>States are obligated to modify the social and cultural practices,
- including information and communication activities, that are based on the
- inferiority or the superiority of either of the sexes and to eliminate any
- stereotyped concept of roles of men and women<bo>. These may mean changing
- media practices which advocate discrimination against women.
-
- <bo>Media should play a positive role in educating and enlightening
- the public toward peace.<bo> Through international law, media are
- repeatedly called on to promote a better knowledge of the conditions of
- life and the organization of peace. Media activities should incorporate
- contents compatible with the task of the preparation for life in peace.
- The mass media must contribute effectively to the strengthening of peace
- and international understanding and to the promotion of human rights.
-
- <bo>Peoples enjoy equal rights and self-determination in communication
- and information<bo>. All peoples have the right freely to pursue their
- chosen system of economic, social and cultural development. This includes
- the right to develop local information and communication infrastructures
- without the interference of external parties, to establish communication
- policies for the benefit of the people, and to participate in international
- information relations without discrimination.
-
- <bo>State enjoy sovereign equality in the communication and
- information infrastructures<bo>. Every state has an inalienable right to
- choose its political, social economic and cultural systems without
- interference in any form by another State. States enjoy the full rights of
- sovereignty and territorial integrity in the area of communication and
- information. From this we derive the principle of "information
- sovereignty," which includes: the right to a locally controlled
- communication infrastructure; the right to an indigenous communication
- policy; the right to participate as an equal in international information
- relations; the right to transmit non-belligerent foreign propaganda; the
- right to conclude bilateral or multilateral agreements in the area of
- communication and information; and the obligation to respect the
- information sovereignty of other States. Every national communication
- system has juridical expression through an "information authority,"
- especially in its constitutional, penal, civil, press, copyright, post and
- telecommunications laws.
-
- <bo>Disputes about communication and information must be settled
- peacefully<bo>. The principle that governments must settle their
- international disputes by peaceful means applies to the processes of
- international communication and information. Many international
- communications activities require advance coordination and, if conflict
- arises, peaceful resolution through negotiation. This principle implies
- that conflicts such as unwanted direct satellite broadcasting must be
- settled by negotiation. If a nation is aggrieved in an area of
- international information relations, it may call upon the violating nation
- to settle the dispute in a way that does not endanger international peace
- and security. This duty also implies that States must refrain from and
- prevent hostile and subversive ideological campaigns.
-
- <bo>Communication and information demand international
- cooperation<bo>. Despite their differences, States have a built-in
- incentive to cooperate in the field of international communication.
- International broadcasters need to coordinate their frequencies to avoid
- interference. New technologies such as transborder data flow and
- international satellite television cannot succeed technically without the
- willingness of States to work cooperatively toward mutually beneficial
- solutions. Future technologies cannot prosper without international
- cooperation in setting technical standards. Cooperation guarantees
- technical success and assures the sovereign equality of States.
-
- <bo>Good faith obligations require States to uphold international
- communication and information law<bo>. States must fulfill in good faith
- their obligations under recognized international law. States must be aware
- of such obligations and obligations to the United Nations Charter and
- cannot refrain from upholding them by pointing to national law. This
- applies in all areas of international law, including international
- communication and information law.
-
- <bo>Certain kinds of international information content are
- prohibited<bo>. There is an absolute ban on war propaganda. In addition,
- there are prohibition of communication content advocating hatred, acts of
- violence or hostility among peoples and races. Media may not advocate
- colonialism, nor may they be used in propaganda against international
- treaties. This includes all communication activities which attempts to
- prohibit or impede the fulfillment of in-force treaty obligations among
- States. In addition, the circulation of obscene publications is forbidden
- under binding international law.
-
- <bo>Certain kinds of information content are encouraged<bo>. To
- begin, the principle of free flow of information is prominent throughout
- international communication and information law. Everyone has the right to
- freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold
- opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information
- and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers. Although this
- right is often abused by powerful countries, it is important to remember
- that this is one of the fundamental goals of international communication
- and information law.
-
- As we enter the 1990s, there is a growing realization that
- <bo>communication and information are central to human rights<bo>.
- Communication media do not merely defend human rights by reporting
- violations and victories. There is a growing perception that <it>the right
- to communicate<it> should be added to the Universal Declaration among the
- <it>basic human rights<it> cherished by all peoples. This new right
- transcends the right to receive information, as guaranteed in the Universal
- Declaration. Today, communication among nations must be a two-way process
- in which partners--both individual and collective--carry on a democratic
- and balanced dialogue and the mass media operate in the service of peace
- and international understanding.
-
- Just like their earthly counterparts, electronic highways require
- "rules of the road." Regulation is important and necessary for our highly
- congested communication thoroughfares. To carry this analogy one step
- further, rules prohibiting drunk drivers from our streets are not meant to
- limit freedom. They increase the freedom for the good drivers. In the
- same way, regulations against communications violating international norms
- are not meant to limit freedom to communicate. They are meant to
- strengthen the freedom for responsible communication. In our lifetimes,
- international law has grown immensely and is respected now more than ever.
- The evolutionary trend is apparent--and so is the work before us.
-
- APPENDIX I
-
- MAJOR DOCUMENTS OF THE
- INTERNATIONAL LAW OF
- COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION
-
- U.S adherence to a binding treaty is indicated with the code
- US=SRE, where S=signed, R=ratified, E=entered into force US=NS
- means that the United States has not signed that particular
- instrument. US=S means that the United States has signed that
- treaty but not ratified it.
-
- 1791 Bill of Rights, U.S Constitution
- 1883/1967 Convention Revising the Paris Convention of March 20, 1883, as
- revised, for the Protection of Industrial Property <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1884 Convention for the Protection of Submarine Cables <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1886 Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, Berne
- <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1910 Agreement for the Suppression of the Circulation of Obscene Publica-
- tions and 1949 Protocol <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1910 Convention Concerning Literary and Artistic Copyright <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1923 International Convention for the Suppression of the Circulation of and
- Traffic in Obscene Publications <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1936 International Convention Concerning the Use of Broadcasting the Cause
- of Peace <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1945 Agreement for the Prosecution and Punishment of the Major War
- Criminals of the European Axis Powers and Charter of the International
- Military Tribunal <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1945 Charter of the United Nations <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1945 Constitution of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
- Cultural Organizations <bo>US=WITHDRAWN <bo>1984
- 1945 Statute of the International Court of Justice <bo>US=DENOUNCED
- <bo>1986
- 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
- <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- 1949 Agreement for Facilitating the International Circulation of Visual and
- Auditory Materials of an Educational, Scientific and Cultural
- Character, with protocol <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1949 Conventions for the Protection of War Victims <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1950 Agreement on the Importation of Educational, Scientific and Cultural
- Materials, with protocol <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1950 [Western European] Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
- Fundamental Freedoms <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1952 Convention on the International Right of Correction <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1952 Universal Copyright Convention as revised with two protocols annexed
- thereto <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1958 Convention Concerning the Exchange of Official Publications and Gov-
- ernment Documents between States <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1958 Convention Concerning the International Exchange of Publications
- <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1960 Convention Against Discrimination in Education, and 1962 Protocol
- <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1961 International Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers
- and Phonograms and Broadcasting Organizations (Rome Convention)
- <bo>US=NS <bo>
- 1966 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
- Discrimination <bo>US=S <bo>
- 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and Optional
- Protocol <bo>US=S <bo>
- 1966 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
- <bo>US=S <bo>
- 1966 Optional Protocol to the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and
- Human Rights <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1967 Convention Establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization
- <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1967 Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Explo-
- ration and Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and other Celestial
- Bodies <bo>US=SRE<bo>
- 1969 American Convention on Human Rights <bo>US=S<bo>
- 1973 International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the
- Crime of Apartheid <bo>US=NS <bo>
- 1974 Convention Relating to the Distribution of Programme-Carrying Signals
- Transmitted by Satellite <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1978 Final Document of the Tenth Special Session of the General Assembly on
- Disarmament
- 1978 Unesco "Declaration on the Fundamental Principles Concerning the
- Contribution of the Mass Media to Strengthening Peace and Internation-
- al Understanding, to the Promotion of Human Rights and to Countering
- Racialism, Apartheid and Incitement to War" (Mass Media Declaration)
- 1979 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against
- Women <bo>US=S <bo>
- 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea <bo>US=NS<bo>
- 1982 International Telecommunications Convention <bo>US=SRE <bo>
- 1983 Declaration on the Condemnation of Nuclear War
- 1984 Declaration on the Right of Peoples to Peace
- 1984 Third Additional Protocol (Final Acts) to the Constitution of the
- Universal Postal Union of July 10, 1964, General Regulations with
- Annex, and the Universal Postal Convention with Final Protocol and
- Detailed Regulations <bo>US=SRE<bo>
-