Journalists in Italy are once again on strike over a collective agreement that expired 10 years ago. While the dispute may seem detached, it raises broader questions about the value of journalism, the conditions under which it is produced, and the quality of information available to the public. In South Tyrol, this issue is especially relevant: autonomy may support minority-language media institutionally, but it does not by itself protect the labour conditions on which quality journalism depends. As a result, the current strike exposes not only a national failure, but also a structural limit in the region’s model of minority protection.
Beate Aufderklamm (Wed,) studied this question.