“A free press can, of course, be both good and bad; but, most certainly, without freedom, the press will never be anything but bad”*…

The Fourth Estate is, of course, hugely influential in civic and political life; a free press is essential to the healthy functioning of a democracy, in the U.S. and around the world— more generally to effective self-determination in any society. So the latest World Press Freedom Index from Reporters Without Borders (RSF) is concerning. Indeed, the global state of press freedom has reached a 25-year low.

RSF has been compiling the Index since 2002; as of this year:

• Less than 1% of the global population lives in a country rated as having “good” press freedom.

• More than half of countries and territories now fall into the “difficult” or “very serious” categories, up from 13.7% in 2002.

• The U.S. ranks 64th globally in 2026, down from 17th when the index began.

The index ranks 180 countries and territories based on five indicators: political context, legal framework, economic context, sociocultural context, and journalist safety.

This world map shows press freedom scores around the world in 2026, revealing a widening divide between Europe, the only region with countries rated “good,” and much of the rest of the world.

More on what’s happening and why: “Mapped: Press Freedom Around the World in 2026,” from @voronoiapp.bsky.social (and, of course, much more in the RSF Index)

(Image above: source)

* Albert Camus

###

As we challenge censorship (and oligopolistic control), we might recall that it was on this date in 1917 that the first Pulitzer Prizes were awarded. In his will, Joseph Pultizer specified solely four awards for excellence in journalism, four in books and drama, one for education, and five traveling scholarships.

In journalism, prizes were to recognize “the most disinterested and meritorious public service rendered by any American newspaper during the preceding year” (a gold medal worth $500 with no monetary component); “the best editorial article written during the year, the test of excellence being clearness of style, moral purpose, sound reasoning, and power to influence public opinion in the right direction” ($500); and “the best example of a reporter’s work during the year, the test being strict accuracy, terseness, the accomplishment of some public good commanding public attention and respect” ($1,000). (A $1,000 prize for the best history of services rendered to the public by the American press in the preceding year was only awarded once; similarly, a $1,000 prize for a paper on the development of the School of Journalism was never awarded due to a dearth of competitors.)…

… the Pulitzer Prize Board, has increased the number of awards to 23 and introduced poetry, music, photography, memoir and audio journalism as subjects, while adhering to the spirit of the founder’s will and its intent…

–  source

The awards were administered/bestowed by Columbia University (the journalism school at which Pulitzer had endowed). Herbert B. Swope received the first Pulitzer for journalism (the only one awarded in that first year of the program) for his series “Inside the German Empire” for the New York World… as it happens, a Pulitzer paper.

The Internet Archive has the book that Swope’s series became)

source

#ColumbiaUniversity #culture #fourthEstate #freePress #history #JosephPulitzer #journalism #politics #pressFreedom #PulitzerPrize #PulitzerPrizes #society
On August 15, 1903, #JosephPulitzer, one of the pioneers of "yellow journalism" here in America, and publisher of "The World," gave $2 million to Columbia University to found a school of journalism. Yes, the same Pulitzer as the Pulitzer Prize.
Tanti auguri di Buon Compleanno 😊 💯 al Geniale Joseph Pulitzer! 😊🥳. #josephpulitzer
“L’ultima minaccia” di Richard Brooks | Valerio Tagliaferri

On August 15, 1903, #JosephPulitzer, one of the pioneers of "yellow journalism" here in America, and publisher of "The World," gave $2 million to Columbia University to found a school of journalism.
WITHIN A WEEK of #NationalCartoonistsDay, #WorldPressFreedomDay and the presentation of the #PulitzerPrizes for journalism, we think this paraphrase quoting #JosephPulitzer bears repeating as a not so subtle suggestion that newspapers have since lost their bearings (along with their sense of humor)…
ON #WorldPressFreedomDay we remind newspaper publishers and editors of the importance of cartoonists as part of their offering, so that together we can stand up to those who oppose #FreedomOfExpression. #WPFD #CartoonistsRights #EditorialCartoons
#josephpulitzer #Pulitzer #pulitzerprize
April 10 is the birthday of noted #publisher #JosephPulitzer who we #quote and back with a picture of a #sunset here in #Fallbrook. If this #quotograph speaks to you please #repost it.

10/29 1911 - Faleceu Joseph Pulitzer -

twitter.com/andreafregnani/sta… -
www.facebook.com/faconti/posts… -
.Jornalista e editor que revolucionou o #Jornalismo, criando conceitos como manchete e primeira página. Dá nome ao mais importante prêmio de jornalismo do mundo - #JosephPulitzer -

Andrea Fregnani on X

Tão, tão grandes mídias brasileiras. Tão, tão bolsominios... #josephpulitzer

X (formerly Twitter)
Die Geschichte des Pulitzer-Preises ist so vielfältig wie die der Oscars. Er wird in mehreren Kategorien vergeben und gilt als renommierteste Journalismus-Auszeichnung weltweit. Ein Rückblick auf vergangene Preisträger. www.dw.com/de/im-spiegel-der-g… #Pulitzer-Preis #JosephPulitzer #Journalismus #DonaldTrump #JohnFKennedy #RobertFrost #JohnSteinbeck
Im Spiegel der Geschichte: Der Pulitzer-Preis | DW | 15.04.2018

Die Geschichte des Pulitzer-Preises ist so vielfältig wie die der Oscars. Er wird in mehreren Kategorien vergeben und gilt als renommierteste Journalismus-Auszeichnung weltweit. Ein Rückblick auf vergangene Preisträger.