In light of the Greek government’s decision to close down the public broadcaster ERT and make its employees redundant - as part of the latest public spending cuts imposed to meet the terms of the country’s bailout deal - City University London is hosting a half-day conference on PSB in the age of austerity:
- Location: City University London (Room A130, School of Social Sciences)
- Time: Thursday 11 July, 11-5pm
- Booking: The event is free to attend and coffee/tea/lunch will be provided. A wine reception will follow the event. Please RSVP P.Iosifidis@city.ac.uk if you wish to attend for catering purposes.
The following themes, among others, will be addressed –
- What has happened to ERT and how the rise of the far right in Greece, the rise of social tension, has made it all important for Greece to have an impartial public service broadcaster;
- Wider implications for PSB in Europe; Subsequent attacks on the BBC by right wing politicians as well as commercial operators;
- Political and market/commercial pressures for a smaller PSB service in the era of austerity;
- The role of PSB in supporting democracy and freedom of speech;
- PSB, production of quality programmes, impact on children and young people
Confirmed speakers/discussants include:
- Professor Steven Barnett (U of Westminster)
- Professor Patrick Barwise (London Business School)
- Professor Jean Chalaby (City University London)
- Professor Sylvia Harvey (U of Leeds)
- Dr. Irini Katsirea (Misslesex U)
- Professor Jeanette Steemers (U of Westminster)
- Professor Lorna Woods (City University London)
- Roger Mosey (Editorial Director, BBC; Executive Board of EBU)
- Nicholas Jones (former BBC political and industrial correspondent)
TIMETABLE
10:30 – 11:00: Welcome – tea/coffee
11:00 -13:00: The closure of ERT and the implications on freedom of speech
- Chair: David Obrien (City University London)
- Petros Iosifidis (City University London) ‘the ERT story’
- Irini Katsirea (Middlesex U) ‘the high court decision about ERT’
- Nicholas Jones (former BBC political and industrial journalist) ‘PSB: A vital role at times of strife’
- Steven Barnett (U of Westminster)
- Discussant: Patrick Barwise (London Business School)
13:00 – 14:00: Lunch
14:00 – 16:00: The Role of PSB in society
- Chair: Howard Tumber (City University London)
- Lorna Woods (City University London) ‘obligations to provide PSB under EU law’
- Jeanette Steemers (U of Westminster) ‘PSB and children’
- Jean Chalaby (City University London)
- Roger Mosey (Editorial Director, BBC; Executive Board of EBU)
- Discussant: Sylvia Harvey (U of Leeds)
16:00 – 17:00: Wine Reception

george brock, leveson inquiry, media reform
George Brock: The post-Leveson dog’s breakfast
In Comment, Journalism, Law on April 25, 2025 at 9:47 amProfessor George Brock
This post originally appeared on georgebrock.net.
I know that this week’s media debate is going to be all about the pros and cons of real-time news sharing in fast-moving crises like the Boston marathon bombings and subsequent shootouts, but my blog has a little catching up to do. While I have been writing a book, the government, Houses of Lord and Commons and the Hacked Off campaign have managed to make a gigantic dog’s breakfast of the follow-up to the Leveson Inquiry into phone-hacking.
This was pretty much the only subject on which I published during the long winter, so I’ll start by rounding up that stuff. It’s hardly surprising that inventive lawyers intent on intimidation are using Leveson’s recommendations to try to silence newspaper reporting or that the Metropolitan Police, who had a grimly embarrassing time in front of Leveson, are being cautious and unhelpful. What has surprised me is the depth of the legal and political doo-doo into which the government has stepped. In a hurry to get the Leveson Inquiry dealt with before the 2015 election season opens next year, the government tied itself in knots which may take years to unravel. The Royal Charter deal on a new press regulator was a rushed botch.
The largest single dilemma which Leveson plonked in the government’s lap is defining “the press”. Leveson was so heavily preoccupied by the issue of the misuse of power accumulated by the major newspaper groups, that he did not treat this as a central issue. He should have: defining who is to be covered by law or regulation dealing with news publishing is a basic issue in an era when “the press” doesn’t really exist any more. I argue in a TLS review (£) of Leveson and a report from the Columbia Journalism School on “post-industrial journalism” that the Leveson report’s worst flaw was that it was so backward-looking.
Thrashing round trying to define internet sites and blogs which are “news-related” and suchlike won’t work for anyone except lawyers who can spend happy years in court fighting over definitions. In this BBC explainer there is a nice little film by Newsnight’s David Grossman trying to explain the new law as it relates to online publishers. The Department of Culture Media and Sport have produced a colourful new diagram to help publishers work out if they’re covered by the new law. Here’s Patrick Smith of MediaBriefing picking holes.
The government seems frightened of open public debate about issues such as “public interest”. The reporting of the Leveson Report when it came out late last year was shoddy and partial. The negotiations leading up to the Royal Charter were opaque. The legislation is whistling through the Commons. Debate hasn’t happened. Opportunities to find better ways have been missed. And Leveson was a great chance to improve law and regulation of the news media, as I tried to explain in this lecture at Gresham College. Pity it was missed.