Thank you for the question.
The report is “World Trends in Freedom of Expression and Media Development”. Every four years, it analyzes the situation of media freedom, media independence and media pluralism worldwide. Therefore, these issues that you just mentioned—the issues of sustainable and viable media or how the Internet environment is impacting freedom of expression positively or negatively—are an essential element of the world trends report that was just published this month, in March.
Obviously, this is a very long report, but basically what I want to underline very quickly is that it brought forward this idea that journalism and information are public goods. In being public goods, they require special protection of the international system and special policies of the national environment to really protect those public goods that are so essential for our democracies. All the UNESCO 193 member states, including Canada, last November approved, in the UNESCO general conference, the “Windhoek+30 Declaration”, which underlines this idea of information and journalism as a public good and establishes three key areas.
One, which I've already mentioned before, is the transparency of the Internet companies. This is fundamental to developing evidence-based policy in these areas. Another is media viability. We can't live with media deserts. We can't live with zones of silence. This can actually impact a lot of our democratic freedoms. The third element, which we haven't mentioned here so far, is media information literacy. It's very important to empower citizens of all ages to deal with phenomena like disinformation and misinformation, hate speech online and conspiracy theories.
This report of UNESCO has gone into the details, not only in addressing the diagnosis but also in putting forward some key recommendations to all the relevant stakeholders in these areas.