Thirty-two years ago next month, I was in Germany reporting on the fall of the Berlin Wall, an event then heralded as a triumph of Western democratic liberalism and even 鈥.鈥

But democracy isn鈥檛 doing so well across the globe now. Nothing underscores how far we have come from that moment of irrational exuberance than the powerful warning the Nobel Prize Committee felt compelled to issue on Oct. 8, 2021 in awarding its coveted Peace Prize to two reporters.

鈥淭hey are representative for all journalists,鈥 Berit Reiss-Andersen, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said to Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov, 鈥渋n a world in which democracy and freedom of the press face increasingly adverse conditions.鈥

The honor for Muratov, the co-founder of Russia鈥檚 , and Ressa, the CEO of the Philippine news site , is enormously important. In part that鈥檚 because of the protection that global attention may afford two journalists under imminent and relentless threat from the strongmen who run their respective countries. 鈥淭he world is watching,鈥 Reiss-Andersen pointedly noted after making the announcement.

Equally important is the larger message the committee wanted to deliver. 鈥淲ithout media, you cannot have a strong democracy,鈥 Reiss-Andersen said.

Maria Ressa, left, and Dmitry Muratov were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Wikimedia Commons/Joshua Lim

Global Political Threats

The two laureates鈥 cases highlight an emergency for civil society: Muratov, editor of what the Nobel Prize Committee described as 鈥渢he most independent paper in Russia today,鈥 has seen for their work criticizing Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

Ressa, a former CNN reporter, because against the website that Ressa must go from judge to judge to ask permission any time she wants to leave the country.

Inevitably, Ressa told me recently, one of them says 鈥渘o.鈥 Maybe that will change now that she has a date in Oslo. But Ressa probably knows better than to hold her breath.

Last year, when I 鈥 a long-time journalist turned professor of journalism 鈥 helped organize a group of fellow Princeton alumni to sign a letter of support for Ressa, . They included members of Congress and state legislatures and former diplomats who served presidents of both parties. One of them was former Secretary of State George P. Shultz, who died several months later, making a show of solidarity with Maria Ressa one of his last public acts. This show of support is a sign of what鈥檚 at stake.

Three decades after the downfall of totalitarian regimes in Eastern Europe, forces of darkness and intolerance are on the march. Journalists are the canaries down the noxious mine shaft. : whether it is the grisly , the or the infamous graffiti 鈥溾 scrawled onto a door of the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrection.

This irrational hatred of purveyors of facts knows no ideology. Former is at least equaled by that of leftist Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega, whose response to his critics in the media has been to, well, .

Digital Menace

What makes today鈥檚 threats to free expression especially insidious is that they don鈥檛 come just from the usual suspects 鈥 thuggish government censors.

They are amplified and weaponized by social media networks that claim the privilege of free speech protection while they allow themselves to be .

鈥淔ree, independent and fact-based journalism serves to protect against abuse of power.鈥 — Berit Reiss-Andersen, chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee

No one has done more to expose the complicity of these platforms in the attack on democracy than Ressa, a tech enthusiast who built her publication鈥檚 website to interface with Facebook and now with its laissez-faire approach to the slander being propagated on its site.

鈥淔reedom of expression is full of paradoxes,鈥 the Nobel Committee鈥檚 Reiss-Andersen observed, in an interview after awarding the Peace Prize. She made it clear that the award to Ressa and Muratov was intended to tackle those paradoxes too.

Asked why the Peace Prize went to two individual journalists 鈥 rather than to one of the press freedom organizations, such as the Committee to Protect Journalists, that have represented Ressa, Muratov and so many of their endangered colleagues 鈥 Reiss-Anderson said the Nobel Committee deliberately chose working reporters.

Ressa and Muratov represent 鈥渁 golden standard,鈥 she said, of 鈥渏ournalism of high quality.鈥 In other words, they are fact-finders and truth-seekers, not purveyors of clickbait.

That golden standard is increasingly endangered, in large part because of the digital revolution that shattered the business model for public service journalism.

鈥淔ree, independent and fact-based journalism serves to protect against abuse of power,鈥 Reiss-Andersen said in the prize announcement. But it is increasingly being undermined and supplanted by what鈥檚 called 鈥渃ontent,鈥 served up algorithmically from in ways that are and that drive partisanship, tribalism and division.

This poses a challenge for public policymakers and the democracies they represent. How to regulate digital media and still protect free speech? How to support the labor-intensive work of journalism and still protect its independence?

Answering those questions won鈥檛 be easy. But democracy may be at a tipping point. With its recognition of two investigative journalists and the crucial 鈥 and dangerous 鈥 work they do to support democracy, the Nobel Committee has invited us to begin the debate.

The ConversationThis article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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