Everything about Project Censored totally explained
Project Censored is a
non-profit,
sociological project of an investigative nature within the
Sonoma State University Foundation. It is managed through the School of
Social Sciences at the university.
According to the Project Censored official website, the organization describes itself as a media research group that "tracks the news published in independent journals and newsletters. From these, Project Censored compiles an annual list of 25 news stories of social significance that have been overlooked, under-reported or self-censored by the country's major national news media."
Project function
Project Censored identifies and researches news stories which it believes have been underreported, mis-reported, or
censored in the
mainstream media. With this research, the group aims to advocate the protection of the
First Amendment rights granted by the
United States Constitution and freedom of information within the
United States of America. The project is built around the "Sociology 435: Media Censorship" course based at the university. This course requires long hours of researching library databases. Each student is invited to develop skills of finding and researching such news stories and make full use of them for the purpose of conducting coverage reports on more than 200 under-published stories yearly. One of the goals of the project is to encourage the development of a national interconnected community-based media news service that will offer a "diversity" of news and information to local mainstream audiences through various media. Support and encouragement is provided to
journalists, faculty, and student investigation of the principle objectives as stated above.
According to the group, a story covered by Project Censored should:
- contain information that the general population has a right and a need to know, but to which it has limited access.
- be timely, ongoing, and have implications for a significant number of residents of the United States of America.
- have clearly defined concepts and be backed with solid verifiable documentation.
- have been published electronically or in print, in a circulated newspaper, journal, magazine, newsletter, or similar publication by a foreign or domestic source.
- have direct connections and implications for people within the United States of America, possibly including activities US citizens are engaged in abroad.
To date, the participants number nearly 200 and include the program staff of the School of Social Sciences at Sonoma State University, its students, its faculty, research interns, community experts, funders, and volunteer judges. Major sources of funding are provided by hundreds of individual donors,
Working Assets,
Anita Roddick, and The
Body Shop International, as well as the Office of the President, the Office of the
Provost, and the School of Social Science at Sonoma State University.
Project Censored was founded in
1976 by Dr. Carl Jensen. He retired in 1996, and since then the project has been directed by Dr.
Peter Phillips.
Published works
Since 1993 Project Censored has published an annual trade paperback review of the “Top 25 Censored Stories of the Year.” Features of the book include
Junk Food News, comic strips by
Tom Tomorrow, updates on previous top stories, essays, and interviews. The publisher is Seven Stories Press in
New York. Other projects include
For the Record, a weekly
radio program featuring underpublished stories, hosted by
Pat Thurston.
Prominent praises
Criticism
According to the editor of the
Pasadena Weekly, Projct Censored suffers from a "perceived extreme left-leaning bent that editors . . . have assumed over the years in selecting, writing, and publishing its stories. . . . more than anything it has been the Project's perceived long leftward lean that has done the most damage to its overall credibility."
Although the group never explicitly takes a
political stance, a majority of the stories Project Censored highlights have a
leftist political slant, criticizing
big business,
economic inequality, damage to the
environment, and
the Pentagon, and misdeeds of
conservative politicians, among other progressive issues; at least 20 of the "Top 25 Censored Stories of 2007" could be classified in one of these categories.
Project Censored has had several well-known progressive journalists and academics on its panel of national judges, including
Robert Jensen,
Martin A. Lee,
Michael Parenti, and
Norman Solomon without any corresponding number of conservatives.
In response, Project Censored and its supporters have stated that
conservatives have been invited to serve as judges each year, but have largely refused; that such right-wing topics as criticism of "big government" have been well publicized by
Republicans in
Congress and covered by the corporate-owned media, and so don't qualify as under-reported; and that Project Censored has in fact featured stories from
The Spotlight, a right-wing newspaper. Project Censored's work seeks to correct the bias of the mainstream media, and from their perspective, "any bias in the upper echelons of journalism looks to be skewed toward established political, economic and social power bases."
The founder of the progressive news analysis and commentary website
AlterNet criticized Project Censored as "stuck in the past" with a "dubious selection process" that "reinforces self-marginalizing, defeatist behavior."
It is also been criticized for reporting on stories which are arguably not "under-reported" or "censored" at all,
as they've appeared in
The New York Times and other high-profile publications. In addition, the group periodically is criticized for shoddy reporting or misrepresentation of facts, the same fallacies the group itself claims to battle. For example, Project Censored has been criticized for consistently downplaying
Serbian atrocities in Bosnia and Kosovo,
for exaggerating the dangers of the
Cassini-Huygens space probe to Saturn,
and for giving support to
9/11 conspiracy theories.
Some of these claims come from other progressive publications, such as
AlterNet, Mother Jones and
New Politics in the examples above, that are concerned that the Project's alleged mis-reporting will give the progressive movement and its alternative media less credibility. Two progressives, professor
Robert Jensen and journalist
Norman Solomon, resigned from Project Censored's panel of national judges over the decision to highlight the
9/11 conspiracy theories of
Steven E. Jones, a founder of
Scholars for 9/11 Truth, in
Censored 2007.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Project Censored'.
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