Mapping of media assistance and journalism support programmes in the Western Balkans region
16. July 2024
16. July 2024
This mapping of media development and journalism support projects in the Western Balkans seeks to provide an overview of programmes as a basis for discussion among donors, media support organisations, media outlets and journalists about the experience and lessons learned from implementing media assistance in Western Balkans as well as for initiating conversations on strategies for future interventions.
The mapping was conducted in preparation for the GFMD Regional Meeting for the wider European region, held on May 24, 2024, in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, as an official side event of the International Press Institute (IPI) World Congress. It focuses on media development and journalism support programmes implemented in individual countries, as well as across the Western Balkans, between 2020 and May 2024. It is therefore a snapshot in a specific moment of time of the current and recently closed programmes funded by donors and implemented by GFMD members and other implementing organisations operating in this region.
This information intends to assist donors, implementers and media communities in the region in their efforts to effectively coordinate media support, avoid overlap and duplication, and identify gaps in funding.
The mapping was a collective and collaborative effort; information was gathered by a GFMD consultant, the GFMD Secretariat, partners, members and donor organisations working in the Western Balkans. Sources included the websites and databases of bilateral and philanthropic donors and implementing partners (USAID, GIZ, EU funding and tenders portal, Internews, NED others), regional and national organisations implementing media assistance and journalism support programmes (BIRN, MDIF and others) and D-portal.
The mapping is an attempt to provide a broad overview of media support funding in the region. However, this information is not exhaustive, as it depends on the public data available, as well as contributions from partner organisations. [1] It may thus inadvertently exclude or limit information related to organisations that do not work directly with GFMD or our partners and/or overrepresent programmes implemented by them. Overlap might also be possible in cases where smaller calls for subgrants could have been parts of larger multiannual media support programmes.
In preparing the summary of mapped programmes dedicated to supporting media in the Western Balkans, the GFMD team aimed to identify the following:
This mapping was conducted in preparation for the GFMD Regional Meeting for the wider European region, where one of the main focuses of discussion were the OECD Development Cooperation Principles on Relevant and Effective Support to Media and the Information Environment. These Principles aspire to encourage development cooperation providers and other actors to improve the relevance and effectiveness of their support and policies to preserve, protect, and promote public interest media and information integrity in the following ways:
In analysing the mapping, and in preparing its conclusions, we examined how the current snapshot of media assistance in the Western Balkans compares with the OECD Principles as a framework, and if the existing themes and modalities of support are in line with these guidelines.
“Determining the same priorities for the six different countries and different contexts is not efficient, some priorities can be relevant for some but not for all countries in the region. In these situations, local offices implement programmes because they were selected as regional priorities even though they are not likely to be effective”.
We would suggest that donors ensure that regional programmes are sufficiently flexible to capture the specifics of each of the countries. This would also be in alignment with Principle 4, which recommends contextualising “risks and opportunities for public interest media and information integrity, tailoring assistance to each individual context” and ensuring that assistance responses remain grounded in local realities, bottom-up, evidence-based, and demand-driven, with audiences and the public interest always at the centre.”
[1] – In an increasingly competitive environment some organisations are understandably less than willing to
share information on funders for fear of others ‘poaching’ their funding sources.