Fragile Progress: CPJ’s recommendations to the EU

A CPJ special report on the struggle for press freedom in the European Union

European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, July 14, 2021. (Reuters/Yves Herman)

The Committee to Protect Journalists’ 2023 report, Fragile Progress, highlights the EU’s responses to the complex and severe challenges currently facing journalists. As a critical juncture for continuing the defense of democracy approaches with the 2024 elections, CPJ believes that the European Union must build on recent EU press freedom reforms, uphold EU values by safeguarding independent journalism for its citizens, and maintain its role as a global standard bearer on press freedom. (Download the full report here.)

To achieve these goals, CPJ calls on the EU to implement the following recommendations:

To the European Commission:

  1. developing its coordination and communication with civil society groups;
  2. increasing visibility and awareness among affected journalist communities in member states with a view to building local trust in the effectiveness of the process;
  3. strengthening it with more measurable and precise recommendations that can serve as benchmarks for progress in EU member states;
  4. ensure that country visits are as visible, transparent, and inclusive as possible, including by creating easily accessible online country guides that allow local journalists to better follow and integrate into the process.

To the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union (as part of inter-institutional legislative negotiations):

To EU member states:

To the European External Action Service:

To the future president of the European Commission (after the 2024 European elections):

To the European Parliament (after the 2024 elections):

Exit mobile version