The rise and fall of the International Organization of Journalists based in Prague, 1946-2016 : useful recollections, part III

書誌事項

The rise and fall of the International Organization of Journalists based in Prague, 1946-2016 : useful recollections, part III

Kaarle Nordenstreng

Charles University, Karolinum Press, 2020

タイトル別名

Useful recollections : excursion into the history of the international movement of journalists

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注記

"This book is sequel to "Useful recollections : excursion into the history of the international movement of journalists", parts I and II, published by International Organization of Journalists in Prague, 1986 and 1988"--Preface

Includes bibliographical references (p. [532]-541) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In this book, Finnish scholar Kaarle Nordenstreng provides a unique account of the Prague-based International Organization of Journalists, a group that was at one time the world's largest media association. The IOJ expanded from a postwar fraternity of professional journalists in twenty countries to a truly global organization that had its hand in running journalism schools, a publishing house, a conference service, and a number of commercial enterprises in Czechoslovakia. Though the Cold War kept most Western journalists' unions isolated from the organization, the IOJ was a major player in Communist Eastern Europe--at its peak in the late 1980s, the IOJ counted 300,000 journalists as members. Nordenstreng--who served as president of the IOJ for fourteen years--illuminates this exciting and little-explored chapter in the history of postwar Europe, from the rise of the Iron Curtain through the post-Soviet 1990s. He enlivens his firsthand account with personal testimonies from former IOJ members and a wealth of previously unpublished internal documents.

目次

Preface 9 PART ONE - HISTORY OF THE IOJ 1. Prehistory 1894-1946 The starting point in the 1890s The FIJ between the World Wars Developments during World War II 2. Founding 1946-47 Copenhagen 1946 Prague 1947 3. Turmoil in the Cold War 1948-53 Crisis 1948-49 Split 1950-53 4. Consolidation 1954-66 Quest for unity 1954-60 Emancipation of the Third World 1961-66 5. Expansion 1966-75 Record congresses and expanding activities 1966-71 Detente facilitating broader co-operation 1971-75 6. Keeping pace with a new world order 1976-80 Celebrating detente in Helsinki and Paris 1976-77 Global outreach with UNESCO, Mexico and Vietnam 1978-80 7. Persevering in a new Cold War 1981-85 Facing and waging campaigns 1981 Promoting peace and circumventing conflicts 1982-85 8. Heyday 1986-89 Turning 40 and in full flower 1986-87 Approaching zenith 1988-89 9. Disintegration 1990-97 Shaken by the fall of communist regimes 1990 Struggling for survival 1991-97 10. Demise 1998-2016 Last activities 1998 The lingering end 1999-2016 11. Overview 1946-2016 The IOJ history in brief Recounting key aspects Epilogue Personal Reflections PART TWO - PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS ABOUT THE IOJ From inside the IOJ Josef Klansky: A young man in a young organization (1947-50) Jiri Meisner: Managing the IOJ to adulthood (1958-66) Vaclav Slavik: The age of achievement with Jiri Kubka (1966-88) Ferdinando Zidar: The story of my expulsion (1972) Pal Tamas: The IOJ empire in Kadarist Hungary (1966-74) Alice Palmer: The IOJ and the American black press (1983-91) Christopher Muzavazi: From heyday to chaos (1988-92) Michel Diard: The French factor (1946-98) Rudiger Claus: A journalist trainer's perspective (1984-98) Phan Quang: Mission accomplished, heritage lives on (1974-98) Testimony of the last four IOJ Presidents Kaarle Nordenstreng: Bridgebuilding in a volatile world (1976-90) Armando Rollemberg: From dream to disappointment (1991-93) Manuel Tome: Acting in crisis (1994) Suleiman Al-Qudah: Towards the end (1995-2016) From outside the IOJ Theo Bogaerts: Three decades in the IFJ (1952-85) Hifzi Topuz: A quarter of a century at UNESCO (1959-83) Paolo Murialdi: Bringing the IOJ and the IFJ together (1974-84) Wolfgang Mayer: Trying to overcome rivalry (1986-2000) APPENDICES - DOCUMENTATION ON THE IOJ 1. Meetings of the IOJ statutory bodies 1946-96 2. Members of the IOJ leadership 1946-96 3. Documents from the Russian State Archive 1949-50 4. IOJ member organizations in 1966 5. Chronology of IOJ activities 1967-90 6. IOJ presentations at the UN 1982-88 7. Statement in Geneva 1984 and press release in Sofia 1985 8. Proposal for main areas of IOJ activity after the 10th Congress 9. Minutes of the IOJ Presidium Bureau in Moscow 1987 10. Mandates of the IOJ Commissions and Committees 1987 11. IOJ member organizations in 1988 12. Survey of the IOJ membership in 1988 and 1991 13. IOJ organizational structure in 1988 and 1990 14. Agenda of the IOJ Secretariat meeting in March 1988 15. IOJ awards until 1988 16. Statement of the 3rd Congress of CSCE Journalists 1989 17. Background paper for the IOJ trade union activities 1989 18. Letter to the IOJ by the 1968 Center of Journalists of CSSR 1989 19. Message from the IOJ on the eve of 1990 20. IOJ buildings and premises in Prague 1990 21. Declaration of the Syndicate of Czech and Moravian Journalists 1990 22. Minutes of the IOJ talks with the Syndicate 1990 23. Minutes of the IOJ talk with the Deputy Prime Minister 1990 24. Report on the IOJ commercial activities in Czechoslovakia 1990 25. The President's report on IOJ developments in 1989-90 26. Temporary arrangements in the Secretariat in April 1990 27. Report on the 11th IOJ Congress in Harare 1991 28. Statement by the IFJ and IOJ for co-operation 1992 29. Proposal by the IAMCR to re-establish the IJI 1992-94 30. The President's post-resignation letter 1994 31. Reports from the 12th IOJ Congress in Amman 1995 32. Internal briefings from the Secretary General 1995 33. IOJ homepage 1995 34. Report of the Executive Committee in Prague 1995 35. The Secretary General's report to the Executive Committee in Hanoi 1996 36. IOJ letter to IFJ Congress in Angers 2016

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