Gary Younge
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How should journalists engage with the far right?
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This chapter aims to examine the ethical risks inherent in both engaging and refusing to engage with the far right and to weigh the political risks and journalistic challenges involved. Such an examination demands an assessment of the relative strength of the far-right forces being covered, the relative seniority of the subjects in question, the purpose of the coverage, and a relational appreciation of what constitutes the far right in any given moment. While this assessment is essentially political, the methods employed should, at all times, adhere to the standard principles of responsible journalism – fairness, independence, a commitment to accuracy, and accountability. The risk that by reporting the far right a journalist might give them the oxygen of publicity must be weighed against the risk that ignoring them will hamper our capacity to fathom their appeal. In weighing those risks, one must further assess the extent to which any coverage serves to publicise their agenda as opposed to exposing it and who gains and loses as a result of that coverage. It is occasionally only possible to assess the relative benefits and downsides of these competing risks by actually doing it. But it is important to understand the risks you are taking before you take them.

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The ethics of researching the far right

Critical approaches and reflections

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