In many instances, whistleblowers find the abusive power they have revealed turned against them, both ending their careers and harming their personal lives.
Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani in late November 2016, after Trump won the presidential election.
AP/Carolyn Kaster
A former congressional staffer says withholding damning evidence from Congress and using civilians to carry out presidential or intelligence agency agendas links the Ukraine crisis to other scandals.
An impeachment inquiry was launched about President Trump’s dealings with the Ukraine on Tuesday.
Reuters/Jonathan Ernst
The conflict between Congress and President Trump over his dealings with Ukraine’s president is just the latest version of a long-running struggle for power between the two branches of government.
Amazon workers in Seattle walked off the job on Sept. 20 in a climate strike.
(AP Photo/Elaine Thompson
There’s no First Amendment in the workplace, which leaves worker activists at the whim of their employers.
Witness K’s lawyer Bernard Collaery addresses outside the Supreme Court. Australia’s laws have shown they don’t do much to protect whistleblowers acting in the public interest.
Lukas Coch/AAP
Australian laws make it inevitable for whistleblowers to be charged whenever national security might be involved, even when the information is in the public interest.
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton appears to have backed down from his previous hardline position on AFP raids and press freedom.
AAP/Sam Mooy
While the ministerial direction represents a genuflection in the direction of press freedom, it provides nothing by way of protection for whistleblowers.
The government has approved a parliamentary inquiry into press freedom – a step the major media organisations have dismissed as unnecessary.
Bianca De Marchi/AAP
A parliamentary inquiry into press freedom is merely a public relations exercise designed to buy time until the public anger over last month’s police raids dies down.
This week’s police raids have forced us to think again about the role of the media in a democracy.
David Gray/AAP
After this week’s police raids on media outlets, we need a better way to balance two crucial elements of our democracy - national security and press freedom.
This week’s media raids, including on the ABC, have given Scott Morrison an unwelcome debate about media freedom.
AAP/David Gray
While Scott Morrison and other Liberals have been very concerned about protecting religious freedom, this week’s raids have brought unwelcome questions about media freedom.
Sacked: former UK defence secretary Gavin Williamson was dismissed following the alleged leak of sensitive government information.
EPA-EFE/Facundo Arrizabalaga
Politicians have been leaking secrets to journalists as long as newspapers have existed. But it’s getting more difficult thanks to surveillance technology.
Chelsea Manning’s disclosures on the Iraq war were major milestones in the emergence of the digital age whistleblower.
Lawyer Bernard Collaery, who will be prosecuted along with his client, known as Witness K, for exposing Australia’s spying on Timor-Leste.
Mick Tsikas/AAP
Targeting Witness K and his lawyer in the Timor-Leste bugging case shows a government increasingly hostile to the media.
Under the proposed changes to the Criminal Code, anybody could face up to 20 years in jail for communicating unauthorised information.
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