This research article examines the evolving role of photojournalistic images within human rights documentation and accountability-oriented practices. It analyzes how photographs originally produced for journalistic purposes migrate into reports, dossiers, and investigative materials prepared by non-governmental organizations, international monitoring bodies, and advocacy networks, where they are evaluated as forms of visual evidence rather than illustrative media content. Situating photojournalism at the intersection of journalistic practice and quasi-legal evidentiary standards, the study explores the criteria through which images acquire credibility, relevance, and legitimacy outside formal judicial procedures. Drawing on interdisciplinary scholarship in journalism studies, visual communication, human rights law, and evidence theory, the article conceptualizes contemporary photojournalism as operating within an implicit quasi-legal environment—one that demands provenance, contextual integrity, transparency, and ethical accountability without the procedural safeguards of courts. The article highlights the methodological and ethical tensions arising from this evidentiary turn, including differences in tolerance for ambiguity, burden of proof, and expectations of verification between journalism and human rights documentation. By articulating these tensions, the study proposes methodological considerations aimed at strengthening the responsible production, interpretation, and use of visual evidence in accountability processes. The version deposited in Zenodo is presented as a peer-reviewed research article intended to support open academic access, citation, and further interdisciplinary research. The content and analytical structure correspond to the author’s original scholarly contribution and have not been substantively modified.
Mykola Khokhotva (Mon,) studied this question.
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