The Uganda Public Broadcasting Corporation Survey Report looks at potential challenges to the integrity of the Uganda Broadcasting Corporation (UBC) as public broadcaster, and makes comprehensive recommendations to protect the independence, integrity, and impartiality of public broadcasting through: fairer regulation and legislation; greater access to information; as well as greater transparency and accountability of the public broadcaster to its citizens.
Launched in Kampala, Uganda on May 25, 2010, the key findings of the report state that civil society and political groupings view the Uganda Broadcasting Corporation as a government-owned and controlled media. This goes against the mandate of a “public broadcaster” that should be accountable to the public and not the government.
The report is a result of a two-year study supported by the Open Society Foundations and the Africa Governance Monitoring and Advocacy Project.
Read more
Ukraine’s Independent Media
Q&A: Telling War Stories Under Fire

It is incredibly tough to cover war against an enemy who wields disinformation amid the bombs and bullets. Yet thousands of displaced Ukrainian journalists carry on. What it takes to keep their stories coming.
Documentary Films
Q&A: Harnessing the Power of Documentary Storytelling

Orwa Nyrabia, artistic director of the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, talks to Open Society about his experiences in Syria as a child and during the war, and its impact on his worldview and creative path
Strength in Numbers
Q&A: How Collaborative Journalism Defeats Censorship

Responding to increasingly violent attacks on reporters all over the world, the organization Forbidden Stories brings journalists together to amplify the stories that enemies of a free press want to keep hidden.