ICCO has launched the first in a series of white papers entitled ‘Modern Communication Challenges for Society’, outlining the PR industry’s role in three priority areas. Following consultation with members and working groups, the three issues deemed most crucial for the PR industry to have a voice were:
1. Freedom of media and freedom of speech
2. Media literacy and educations
3. New Technology and Digital Media Ethics
To tackle these challenges, the paper calls for a serious alliance across industries including journalism, advertising, tech and policymakers. The paper outlines the issues, their impact on PR practice and PR’s role finding solutions. As part of this work, ICCO and its members have been contributing to the relevant committees within the Council of Europe, to discuss legislative and educational solutions.
Massimo Moriconi, Europe President, ICCO said:
“PR professionals both design the modern communication landscape, and are key players within it, dictating how media impacts people’s lives. Freedom of media to enable free expression, media literacy to fight fake news, and responsible use of artificial intelligence, are all at the core of today’s agenda for ICCO. This first white paper was created as a global collaboration, taking heed from the Council of Europe’s great work. The paper will inspire and support PR businesses and communications stakeholders in our efforts to collectively design a better communications landscape and benefit society.”
Patrick Pennickx, Head of Information Society, Council of Europe said:
“We look forward to working with the public relation industry, global institutions, and other relevant stakeholders, to tackle these critical issues at a time of great change for the global media landscape”.
Nitin Mantri, President, ICCO said:
“This paper can be the start of a great dialogue between all types of stakeholders as we tackle core issues facing communications today – with PR professionals rightly at the heart of the conversation.
It is important to acknowledge this paper is being published amidst war in Ukraine, win which systemic, sophisticated misinformation is being communicated by the Russian government. Through collective, international high standards, we can fight bad practice in a coherent and emphatic way”
The paper calls on PR professionals and all media stakeholders to:
- Engage with the issues directly and understand the role of PR within them.
- Engage with national PR associations and projects locally
- Open dialogues that span PR, advertising, tech and journalism
- Bring forth and ideas and solutions as we create further papers, tools, standards and agreements.
The paper can be downloaded here.