Worthy Of Consideration

Posted on Tuesday, July 17 at 17:27 by Diogenes
Isabel Hilton was successively editor and editor-in-chief of openDemocracy between March 2005 and July 2007. She is editor of the bilingual Chinese-English website on environmental and climate-change issues, chinadialogue [4] Isabel Hilton has been contributing [4] to openDemocracy since June 2001, a month after we went live. Among her twenty-seven articles, interviews, introductions and profiles are: "Semper Fidel [4]" (25 September 2001) "Torture: who gives the orders? [4]" (13 May 2004) "Five principles for a safer future [4]" (8 February 2005) "China and Japan: a textbook argument [4]" (20 April 2005) "Letter from wounded London [4]" (7 July 2005) "Álvaro Uribe's gift: Colombia's mafia goes legit [4]" (25 October 2005) "Beijing's media chill [4]" (15 February 2006) "The Economist and Britain's future [4]" (3 February 2007) "Peacework: lessons we have failed to learn [4]" (4 June 2007) When I arrived as openDemocracy's editor in March 2005, after a career largely spent in print and broadcasting, that view was common amongst my former colleagues. It was not that none of them read online, more that they were faintly embarrassed to admit it, as though real men did not learn anything on the net. At openDemocracy we kept a tally of distinguished print journalists whose latest articles were thinly reprocessed versions of something that we, or other sites, had published - material that had been plundered unacknowledged, in a manner that would have been unconscionable for the same guilty parties had the source been in print. Anything on the internet, they seemed to feel, was not only free to read, it was also free to plagiarise [5]. Polite emails would go out, requesting that they acknowledge the source of their inspiration. This process was not without its ironies: the conventional view of the relationship of new media to old is that new media are parasitic on old, that without the newsgathering and professionalism of the old media, there would be nothing for the bloggers to blog about and that all the noise on the net is but a confusing echo of the real sounds made by print. Our experience at openDemocracy was rather different. Since in almost all cases we published material that had not appeared [5] elsewhere, since we commissioned original articles on subjects of public interest [5], since we found writers whom old media had not discovered [5], and since we encouraged writers from the global south [5], we soon found ourselves a source of ideas for radio and television discussion programmes: researchers and producers had us bookmarked and the cast of characters in an on-air discussion would often bear a startling resemblance to the authors we had published on a theme [5]. Could they, as Private Eye would say, be related? Cross-fertilisation is a good and healthy thing in a culture and we were and are of course glad of this evidence of influence. My point is that the traffic between old and new media is two-way. In my time at openDemocracy, old media - faced with static or declining in sales - have scrambled to catch up with the possibilities of the web. Newspapers' websites now rank equally in importance with the print version and attract more readers, therefore more advertising. Few publications now imagine they can survive without a web presence [6]. For openDemocracy, the challenge has always been to find a place through innovation - editorially and organisationally. Now I am leaving openDemocracy, after two and a half years, to concentrate on the growing demands of www.chinadialogue.net [7] - a very different, but to me, equally valuable and urgent challenge - that of establishing a constructive dialogue between China and the rest of the world on climate change and the environment. It has been an extraordinary and exciting period for me to be (successively) editor and editor-in-chief of openDemocracy, a chance to be part of one of the best networks and communities in the world: those who have written for us, those who have read us and those many people who have contributed advice, attention and comments. The staff I have worked with - both on the editorial and the technical side - have been remarkable for their dedication and professionalism. The freedom to choose how we would approach an issue and how we would try to understand our world has been a constant stimulus. openDemocracy is a work of many, many hands. It has been a privilege to be one of them. As to my friend, perhaps he will never know what he has missed. Average rating (4 votes) Rate this: ---Excellent!Great!GoodQuite goodNot so great Trackback URL for this post: http://www.opendemocracy.net/trackback/34055 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Source URL: http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/opendemocracy_salute_farewell Links: [1] http://www.nytimes.com/ [2] http://news.bbc.co.uk/ [3] http://www.nicholasbrealey.com/uk/pc/viewPrd.asp?idproduct=205 [4] http://www.chinadialogue.net/ [5] http://www.randomhouse.com/pantheon/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780375424755 [6] http://www.economist.com/index.html [7] http://www.chinadialogue.net/ This article is published by Isabel Hilton , and openDemocracy.net under a Creative Commons licence. You may republish it free of charge with attribution for non-commercial purposes following these guidelines. If you teach at a university we ask that your department make a donation. Commercial media must contact us for permission and fees. Some articles on this site are published under different terms.

Note: http://www.opendemocrac... www.chinadialogue.net http://www.opendemocrac... http://www.opendemocrac... http://www.nytimes.com/ http://news.bbc.co.uk/ http://www.nicholasbrea... http://www.chinadialogu... http://www.randomhouse.... http://www.economist.co... http://www.chinadialogu...

Contributed By


Topic


Article Rating

 (0 votes) 

Options





You need to be a member and be logged into the site, to comment on stories.




Your Voice

To post to the site, just sign up for a free membership/user account and then hit submit. Posts in English or French are welcome. You can email any other suggestions or comments on site content to the site editor. (Please note that Vive le Canada does not necessarily endorse the opinions or comments posted on the site.)

canadian bloggers | canadian news