AFLI Policy brief on integrating human rights in regulation of media practice in Uganda
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Date
2019
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Leadership Institute
Abstract
Despite ratification of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 19) and recognition
of freedom of opinion and expression by the Constitution of Uganda (1995), state and
media practitioners continue to clash in public space over the right of media to access public
information and to determine content and presentation of media output.
This policy brief discusses integration of universal media freedoms and rights into the media
policy framework, and is based on policy research commissioned by the Uganda Policy Development
Management Forum based at Uganda Management Institute (UMI), in partnership
with Africa Leadership Institute (AFLI).
Data was obtained by document review
and presented to a public policy dialogue
attended by media practitioners, government
technocrats in the ministry of
ICT and National Guidance, Civil Society
Organizations (CSOs), academia and the
general population.
The study established that the international
human rights standards were
entrenched in the Constitution of the
Republic of Uganda of 1995 which provides
the overarching framework that
specifies state obligations and accountability
on rights and freedoms. The study
established that these rights are largely
misunderstood and hardly implemented
in the Ugandan media space.
This policy brief recommends that; government
of Uganda embraces a holistic
approach to media regulation to include;
protection of media freedom and human
rights, recognition of information as a
public good; capacity building for media
practitioners; expeditious law reforms to
integrate media freedom as a fundamental
human right, establishment of laws
to sanction individuals who abuse media
privilege; inclusion of media interests in the National Action Plan and National Development
Plan, commemoration of international and local media days and strengthening of networks
for media practitioners. Media should also build internal checks to self- regulate and enforce
professionalism.
Description
Funded by Democratic Governance Facility and produced in partnership with Uganda Management Institute and FIT Insights
Keywords
Human Rights, Regulation of media practice, Uganda