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How Media Regulation Works in India

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India's media regulatory framework is fragmented across multiple ministries, statutory bodies, and self-regulatory mechanisms — none of which provides the comprehensive, independent oversight that press freedom advocates identify as essential for media plurality and accountability.  The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) is the primary government regulatory body for television broadcast and print media policy; it grants uplink/downlink permissions for satellite TV channels, administers the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, manages film certification through the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), and formulates information and broadcasting policy.  Representational Image: How Media Regulation Works in India The Press Council of India (PCI), established under the Press Council Act, 1978, is a statutory quasi-judicial body that adjudicates complaints against print media for breaches of journalistic ethics; it has no authority over television or...

How Indian Media Covers Conflict and Security

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India's media coverage of conflict and security events — military operations, terrorist attacks, communal violence, and internal security operations — is shaped by a specific tension between national security information management and democratic accountability journalism.  The government's ability to control information flows during security events is extensive: internet shutdowns (India leads the world in documented internet shutdowns), information blackouts in conflict zones, prevention of independent journalist access to conflict areas, and the legal deterrent of UAPA charges for "anti-national" reporting.  This information control, combined with the commercial incentives of television news (national security events generate peak TRP), produces a media environment during security crises that is simultaneously information-abundant (in government-endorsed narratives) and information-poor (in independent verification). Representational Image: How Indian Media Covers ...

How Regional Language Media Shapes Local Politics

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India's regional language media constitutes the primary information environment for the majority of Indians. While the Times of India, Hindustan Times, and English television channels dominate the internationally visible portion of Indian media, the media that actually shapes political behaviour, cultural attitudes, and social norms for most Indians is their state's language press — Tamil newspapers, Telugu channels, Malayalam broadcasting, Bengali dailies, Marathi weeklies, and the hundreds of Hindi-belt regional papers.  India's four major Hindi dailies reach more readers than all English newspapers combined; Tamil Nadu's Dinamalar, Dinamani, and Dainik Tamil Murasu have readerships that dwarf The Hindu's Chennai edition among Tamil speakers; Kerala's Malayala Manorama (Malayalam) is one of the world's highest-circulation vernacular newspapers. Representational Image: How Regional Language Media Shapes Local Politics Regional language media and national la...

How Journalists Are Threatened and Killed in India

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India averages two to three journalist killings per year attributable to their work — placing it among the world's most dangerous countries for media professionals. RSF's 2026 World Press Freedom Index confirms this pattern, documenting that journalist murders, physical attacks, coordinated online harassment, and legal harassment together constitute a threat environment that has chilled critical journalism in India.  Between 2014 and 2019, 40 journalists were killed and at least 198 severe attacks on journalists were reported (CPJ/RSF data), with 36 attacks occurring in 2019 alone.  More recently, Mukesh Chandrakar — a freelance journalist in Bijapur, Chhattisgarh — was found murdered in January 2025 after reporting on alleged corruption in a road construction project; his body was discovered in a decomposed state after he went missing following an investigation into local contractor networks. Representational Visualisation: How Journalists Are Threatened and Killed in In...

What Journalism Education Looks Like in India

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India's journalism education system serves one of the world's largest media industries — with approximately 1 lakh (100,000) journalism graduates entering the workforce annually from hundreds of institutions — through a fragmented, quality-inconsistent, and frequently outdated curriculum that does not adequately prepare graduates for the rapidly evolving media environment.  The sector encompasses: autonomous journalism schools (IIMC Delhi, ACJ Chennai, Symbiosis Institute of Media and Communications, AJK MCRC at Jamia Millia Islamia); journalism departments within major universities (DU, JNU, AMU, Panjab University); private mass communication institutes; and the expanding distance education sector.  The quality spectrum is enormous: IIMC (Indian Institute of Mass Communication) and ACJ (Asian College of Journalism) produce graduates who enter major national outlets; thousands of smaller journalism programmes in colleges across India produce graduates with limited practical sk...

How Fake News and Misinformation Work in India

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India was ranked by the World Economic Forum's 2024 Global Risk Report as the country with the highest risk of misinformation and disinformation globally. This assessment reflects a combination of structural conditions that make India exceptionally vulnerable: 800+ million internet users with highly variable media literacy; a dominant role for encrypted WhatsApp groups in information circulation; extreme linguistic diversity (22 scheduled languages + hundreds of dialects) that makes systematic fact-checking structurally difficult; a political environment that incentivises the creation and distribution of false information; and a history of misinformation-related communal violence in which false rumours (about cow slaughter, child kidnapping, minority community violence) have directly triggered mob attacks and deaths. Representational Image: How Fake News and Misinformation Work in India WhatsApp is the primary vector for misinformation in India — not because WhatsApp is uniquely pr...

How Investigative Journalism Survives in India

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Investigative journalism in India — the systematic, evidence-based inquiry into matters of public interest that power would prefer remain unexposed — has survived, and in the digital era found new institutional homes, despite a media environment structurally hostile to it.  The organisations doing the most significant investigative work in contemporary India are almost entirely from the digital independent sector: The Wire, Newslaundry, The News Minute, Scroll, The Caravan, AltNews, The Reporters' Collective, and an ecosystem of regional and vernacular investigative journalists working independently.  Representational Image: How Investigative Journalism Survives in India They have collectively exposed: the electoral bonds quid-pro-quo nexus between political donations and government agency raids; NDTV's takeover mechanics; police encounters in UP and Manipur; welfare scheme corruption in multiple states; surveillance of journalists and political opponents using Israeli Pe...
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