Article 19

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Article 19
LOGO ARTICLE 19.jpg
Motto Defending freedom of information and expression
Founded February 5, 1987 (1987-02-05)
Founder J. Roderick MacArthur
Greg MacArthur
Aryeh Neier
Martin Ennals
Type British International nongovernmental organization
Registration no. Charity number 327421
Focus Freedom of expression and freedom of information
Location
  • London, UK
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Key people
Thomas Hughes
Executive Director
Revenue
₤4,005,835 (2014)
Employees
100+
Mission "Article 19 works so that people everywhere can express themselves freely, access information and enjoy freedom of the press."
Website www.article19.org

Article 19 (stylized ARTICLE 19) is an British human rights organization with a specific mandate and focus on the defense and promotion of freedom of expression and freedom of information worldwide founded in 1987.[1] The organization takes its name from Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; the right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media regardless of frontiers.

Activities

Article 19 monitors threats to free expression around the globe; lobbies governments to adopt laws that conform to international standards of freedom of expression; and drafts legal standards that strengthen media, public broadcasting, free expression, and access to government-held information. The Law Programme also produces legal analysis and critiques of national laws, including media laws. In addition, Article 19 intervenes in cases of individuals or groups whose rights have been violated; and provides capacity-building support to non-governmental organizations, judges and lawyers, journalists, media owners, media lawyers, public officials and parliamentarians.

Article 19’s work is organised into five Regional Programmes—Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East—and a Law Program. It has over 100 staff and regional offices in Bangladesh, Brazil, Kenya, Mexico, Myanmar, Senegal,and Tunisia. It works in partnership with nearly 100 organizations in more than 60 countries around the world.

Coalitions

Article 19 is a founding member of the International Freedom of Expression Exchange (IFEX), a clearinghouse for a global network of non-governmental organizations that monitor free expression violations worldwide. It is also a member of the Tunisia Monitoring Group, a coalition of 21 free expression organizations that lobbied the Tunisian government to improve its human rights record.[2] And it is the coordinator of the International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan (IPGA), a coalition of international organizations working to promote and protect freedom of expression in Azerbaijan.

Article 19 is a founding member of the Freedom of Information Advocates (FOIA) Network, a global forum that aims to support campaigning, advocacy and fundraising on access to information through the exchange of information, ideas and strategies. The FOIA Network also aims to facilitate the formation of regional or international coalitions to address access to information issues.

Description

Finances

Article 19 lists its regular financial contributors on its website:

Leaders

Shortly before his death in 1984, J. Roderick MacArthur established a vision for Article 19 as a global human rights organization that would focus on censorship issues.[3] His son Greg MacArthur, director of the J. Roderick MacArthur Foundation, set the wheels in motion for the creation of the organization inspired by an Article from the Universal Declaration of Human rights.[4] Through Aryeh Neier—a lawyer and human rights leader who was formerly the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (1970–1978) before founding Human Rights Watch in 1978[5] -- Martin Ennals was appointed to realize the idea.[6] Ennals brought his experience from UNESCO, the National Council for Civil Liberties, and the Nobel Prize-winning Amnesty International, and started the Article 19 organization in 1986 with a budget around $1,500,000 and a staff of eight with its first executive director Kevin Boyle.[7][8][9][10]

Article 19 Executive Directors
Kevin Boyle 1987-1989 [7][8]
Dr Frances D'Souza 1989-2002 [3]
Andrew Puddephatt 2003-2004 [11][12][13][14][15]
Dr Agnès Callamard 2004–2013 [16]
Thomas Hughes 2013–present [17]

As executive director, Kevin Boyle oversaw the first report that would summarize the current state of censorship on a global scale in a report released in 1988. The Article 19 report "Information, Freedom and Censorship" established a benchmark from which to move forward. In the report, Article 19 was critical of the United Kingdom where the government could interfere in the British Broadcasting Company's editorial decisions. Other directors would also criticize the United Kingdom frequently even though the organization is based in London.[18]

Under the leadership of Boyle, Article 19 also took up as its first campaign, the defence of one of its own. Among Article 19's first directors on its Board of Directors was South African journalist Zwelakhe Sisulu.

Article 19, International Board of Trustees, 2014–15
Paddy Coulter Chair
Nigel Saxby-Soffe Treasurer
Frank LaRue Trustee
Galina Arapova Trustee
Catherine Smadja Trustee
Lydia Cacho Trustee
Evan Harris Trustee
Kamel Labidi Trustee
Malak Poppovic Trustee

The Sisulu name was well known worldwide as both of his parents were activists against South Africa's Apartheid system. Sisulu himself had established his own reputation as the leader of a press strike by black journalists in 1980. For this activity, he was arrested and banned from journalism for 3 years. After his disappearance in 1986 and after his arrest was made official, Article 19 took up the case of its own human rights defender.[18] Sisulu was released two years later.[19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26]

Dr Frances D'Souza,[27] a founder and former director of Relief and Development Institute focusing on famine monitoring and relief operations, became the organization's second executive director 4 July 1989. She brought with her years of experience as a human rights defender from the field. Among her signature campaigns was the defence of Salman Rushdie after Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwā, or religious ruling, 14 February 1989 based on the charge that the book The Satanic Verses (1988) was a work of blasphemy. The religious ruling was a death sentence. D'Souza became the chairwoman of the Salman Rushdie Defence Committee while also executive director of Article 19 and became the writer's main spokesperson.[28][29]

D'Souza also participated in the drafting of the Johannesburg Principles in 1995.[30]

Location

In June 2009, Article 19 moved to Farringdon Road in London to become part of the Free Word Centre promoting literature, literacy and free expression.

See also

References

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  27. Sometimes misspelled as De Souza.
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External links