Backspin FrontPage
Backspin FrontPage
HonestReporting.com
Media Backspin
About Media Backspin Contact Media Backspin Media Backspin
  Media Backspin
Backspin FrontPage
 
 
 
Media Backspin RSS Feed   [ About RSS ]
 
Subscribe with Bloglines
 
Add to My AOL
 
Subscribe in Bloglines
 
Subscribe to MyMSN
 
 
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
 
Add to Google Reader or Homepage
 
ARCHIVES January 2011 December 2010 November 2010 October 2010 September 2010 August 2010 July 2010 June 2010 May 2010 April 2010
 
 
Media Backspin
« Gaza Journo: Hamas Censorship Hampers Objectivity | Main | Passover Pause Button »

Sunday, March 28 2010

An In-Depth Look at HRW

Marc_Garlasco_Iron_Cross A few months ago, it would've been unthinkable that a major daily like the Sunday Times of London would publish a critical, comprehensive look at Human Rights Watch.

This isn't just about Marc Garlasco (HRW's military expert quietly dismissed after Mere Rhetoric exposed his embarassing Nazi memorabilia collection), Joe Stork (deputy head of HRW, who once praised the Munich massacre in a radical leftist paper), Sarah Leah Whitson (who made a controversial fund-raising visit in Saudi Arabia), or Judge Richard Goldstone  (a conflict of intererst forced him to resign his position on HRW's board of directors).

The moral of the story is deeper than this foursome:

Human Rights Watch does perform a useful task, but its critics raise troubling questions that go beyond Garlasco’s hobby or raising money from Saudis. Why put such effort into publicising alleged human-rights violations in some countries but not others? Why does HRW seem so credulous of civilian witnesses in places like Gaza and Afghanistan but so sceptical of anyone in a uniform?

It may be that organisations like HRW that depend on the media for their profile — and therefore their donations — concentrate too much on places that the media already cares about.

Yes, HRW depends on the media for its profile. And when it comes to bashing Israel, HRW provides what the news services need most -- something NGO-Monitor refers to a halo effect:

The evidence shows that many journalists simply reprint NGO reports without question or verification. This is known as the “halo effect”, and violates both journalistic ethics, which require skepticism and independent verification, and the norm when reporting from other sources, including government officials. But when a “highly respected human rights watchdog” such as Amnesty International or HRW makes a statement, journalists tend to ignore the bias and repeat this as fact.

Read the whole story.

 

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834515b7869e201310fedd283970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference An In-Depth Look at HRW:



 

Comments

HR Links


HR Social Media


Featured Blogs


Featured Links

 
Media Backspin