INTERNATIONAL LABOUR OFFICE STUDIES AND REPORTS Series L (Professional Workers) No. 2 CONDITIONS OF WORK AND LIFE OF JOURNALISTS GENEVA 1928 CONTENTS M \ •• v> Page INTRODUCTION I. 1 T H E PROFESSION 13 The Training of Journalists and the Recruiting of the Profession Aspects and Composition of the Profession . . . A. Aspects of the Profession B. Composition of the Profession . . . . Organisation of the Profession II. T H E STATUS OF THE JOURNALIST III. TERMINATION OF SERVICES DISPUTES AND Termination of Services The Settlement of Disputes IV. V. 54 SETTLEMENT OF 77 77 90 W O R K I N G CONDITIONS 100 Hours of Work Night Work Weekly Rest Annual Leave Salaries 100 108 112 118 127 T H E LABOUR MARKET Unemployment Methods of Finding Employment VI. 13 18 19 26 28 PROVIDENT INSTITUTIONS CONCLUSION Appendix A Appendix B 162 162 168 174 200 215 217 INTRODUCTION The situation in which journalists find themselves to-day is one of serious difficulty, reflecting partly the price paid for the progress of journalism itself, and partly the consequences of the vast economic upheaval which followed the war and which, while it affected all workers, was particularly disastrous to brain workers, including those who live by journalism. I n order to obtain a true appreciation of present conditions, it is desirable first to glance rapidly over the history of the evolution of journalism. Journalism is of recent birth. I t is quite a modern profession ; in fact, one of t h e youngest in the world. There have been actors, musicians, and architects almost as long as man has existed ; there have been journalists only for two or three generations. We may say this, we hope, without being accused of forgetting venerable ancestors — t h a t Chinese official journal, for example, which bears the overwhelming weight of fourteen centuries ; or, penetrating still further into antiquity, the Ada Diurna of ancient Rome. Nor do we overlook those " gazettes " which appeared at Antwerp and Venice towards the middle of the sixteenth century, or those which were published a little later at Cologne, Frankfort, and Strasburg, or, above all, those many sheets of the eighteenth century which played such an important part in the social upheavals of the time. All these, however, were only forerunners. We must pass over a few more decades before we can see the emergence of t h a t power which the Press was to become, and the development of the great profession which journalism was to be in the modern world. The history of the newspaper is punctuated by a number of inventions which enabled journalism to make prodigious bounds. First of all, a little after 1810, came the printing machine, displacing the old hand press which only allowed of the printing of a few hundred copies, and raising the output tenfold at a single stroke Next, in 1814, there was the organisation and centralisation of the manufacture of ink with which previously each printer had had to occupy himself in his own workshop. A little later there was the — 2 — improvement in type-founding which doubled the production of type. About 1844 the telegraph made its appearance, an invention which was destined to enable the newspaper to become an almost instantaneous informant of the most distant happenmgs. I n 1850 came the invention of wood pulp paper, which prevented the starvation of the newspaper for want of paper by providing the Press abundantly with raw material. The same invention led t o another invention, equally of capital importance, when twelve years later Hoe built, in America, the first rotary printing machine, which, thanks to continued improvement, enables a newspaper of 64 pages to be printed off nowadays at the rate of more t h a n 25,000 copies an hour. Finally, we have the invention of typesetting machines — linotype and monotype — which completely changed the processes of typographical composition followed for more than five centuries, and synchronised type-setting with the accelerated pace of printing. Between 1830 and 1840 occurred another event, concerned not with machinery but with the financial organisation of the paper, and fraught with the greatest consequences for the future of the Press. I t was about this time t h a t the idea spread abroad of looking for the revenue of the paper not in the receipts from its sales as hitherto, but in an auxiliary power — advertising. From t h a t time, the newspaper, having become cheap, was easily sold, penetrated everywhere, increased its circulation, and, by this very means, obtained new resources from advertising, which found in the newspaper a wider field for propaganda, and paid more for it. All these material means allowed of a prodigious development of the Press 1 , a development facilitated by the progress of democracy and education which created the need, and by the increase of capital which furnished the means. The newspaper thus rapidly became what it is now — a factor which plays such a p a r t in the life of to-day t h a t it would be difficult to picture the world without it. The newspaper is everywhere. It has transformed social life. The news, judgments, and opinions which had t o be sought in former times in the street, in drawing-rooms and in antechambers, now travel much more quickly, in much greater quantity, and from much more remote spots, into our very homes. They are so indispensable, we are so accustomed to knowing what goes on in 1 Nothing is more indicative of this development t h a n the following few figures : in ninety years, from 1831 t o 1921, the number of periodicals increased in Belgium from 34 to 1,112 ; in 1874 the post distributed 56,000,000 copies of newspapers ; in 1902, 133,000,000 ; in 1921, 231,000,000. the world, t h a t it is impossible to imagine a great nation suddenly deprived of newspapers for any considerable time. In such circumstances, the nation would doubtless appear as though struck down with paralysis. These thousands of sheets which are daily scattered among the crowds of our towns, and reach the remotest recesses of our countrysides, are very like the nerve impulses of present-day civilisation. I n Germany, in 1926, there were 3,812 dailies and 4,309 weeklies; there were 1,100 periodicals in Belgium, 1,500 in Canada, several thousands in China, and more than 2,000 in Spain. I n Denmark, in addition to 750 periodicals, weekly and monthly, there are 320 newspapers with a circulation of 1,100,000 copies, t h a t is to say, one copy for every three inhabitants. I n the United States, in 1920, there were 2,400 daily newspapers and 14,800 weeklies. The total circulation of the daily papers in the United States rose from 28,700,000 copies in 1914 to 35,730,000 in 1923. In the same year, the newspaper industry comprised 10,267 establishments employing 238,550 persons. In France there is the same prodigious development. A hundred daily papers appear in Paris alone, and several of them have a circulation of more than 500,000 copies. In Great Britain there are 2,400 newspapers, at least one of which has a circulation of more than a million. Italy had a thousand periodicals, the Netherlands a thousand, J a p a n more t h a n 3,000, and Poland more than 5,000, at the end of 1924. Switzerland has 2,000 papers and magazines, or one periodical for 2,000 inhabitants. Czechoslovakia also has 2,000, of which 710 appear in the city of Prague alone. We can imagine the army of manual and intellectual workers bestirring themselves to-day around the printing presses of a newspaper. These workers are employed in three main departments : editorial, managerial, and printing. Only the editorial department will be touched upon here. In this department there are sometimes a few, sometimes several hundred, people who have to perform well-defined tasks, standardised ¡long ago, for all newspapers are produced in much the same way. When there are only a few editors, each has to fulfil a number of these functions ; on the other hand, when there are many editors, and if the undertaking is larger, there are several for a single task. According to the nature of the paper, certain functions are diminished in favour of others. There are two principal categories of papers — papers giving news and papers giving opinions. The former seek more especially to inform their readers of the events — 4 — of the day while maintaining a certain impartiality with regard to them. They cater for all the world, and their readers are recruited in the most widely differing spheres. The latter t r y t o propagate a particular doctrine, religious or political ; their readers generally belong t o a party — t h a t of the paper or t h a t of its opponents. These papers are read to be followed or to be combated ; they belong to the world of contention. I t is quite obvious t h a t certain tasks, those having to do with news, are reduced to very little in these papers, while the political side is highly developed. The importance of these distinctions, however, must not be exaggerated, because more often than not there is news in the journals of opinion and there are opinions in the news papers. At the head of the editorial department is the editor. I t is he who is responsible for the leader — a short article which gives the opinion of the paper on the events and the problems of the day. After him comes the sub-editor. " He is the pivot of the paper. I t is he who receives and reads the articles and often orders them. I n any case, it is he who deals with their publication, who requires, if need be, corrections and cuts to be made, who with the help of the makers-up, settles the order and the place in which the articles will appear, the type in which they will be set, the headlines, and the illustrations which will accompany the text. He is obliged t o remain until the moment at which the stop-press news arrives. If the newspaper appears in the morning, he is at work until 2 a.m. and he goes home as best he can. If the paper appears in the evening, he works until 2 o'clock in the afternoon and he lunches when he finds time. His very fatiguing work is well enough paid, but he dies or retires fairly young. He is in touch with the reporters, who fear him, and with the printers, who carry out his orders. He is thus the liaison officer between the intellectual and the manual workers of the paper. " 1 Next in order come the editorial staff proper. To begin with, there are the numerous special writers, critics, and news writers ; the first, who are generally well-known men, sometimes occupying public posts, write the chief article in which the questions of the day are discussed ; the others — the dramatic critic, musical critic, literary critic, and scientific correspondent — give their opinions on important happenings in the world of art, on recent 1 G. RBNABD : Les travailleurs du livre et du journal, Vol. I I , p . 266. Paris, 1925. — 5 — books, and on scientific activities. Then come the reporters of all kinds ; those who furnish an account of the proceedings of courts or of Parliament, who describe sporting events, who report miscellaneous happenings, the gossip of the fashionable world, news of the social life, and those who in other towns of the same country keep their paper informed of local events, and, lastly, those who, still farther away, send it the foreign news. The reporter is a very characteristic figure of the modern paper. Keen and resourceful, he tries to get the news before anyone else, to track down the sensational event or the merely useful piece of information. Often the camera provides him with a hurriedly snapped picture, a document made on the spot, which will illustrate his text. There is reporting on a small scale — the reporting of miscellaneous talk and facts ; there is also reporting on a large scale — reporting which involves long journeys, patient researches, and sometimes dangerous missions. Some of the collaborators of t h e paper work at home ; they never come to the office or they call only to bring their " copy " and t o keep in touch with headquarters. Others work on t h e premises, and constitute, with the administrative staff and the workers of the press room, the permanent personnel. They have their place in the editorial offices or have a private room. They are obliged t o keep more or less regular hours according to the paper and the nature of their work. They prepare their " stories " on the premises or, reserving this creative work for more tranquil moments, they collaborate in the thousand-and-one tasks t h a t the running of a newspaper entails — reception and sorting of news, proof-reading, etc. . Whom does all this newspaper world obey? What is the power which directs its activity ? To reply to such a question, we must first of all realise what a modern newspaper is. For some decades a progressive transformation of the methods governing the establishment and the management of a newspaper has been going on. Industrial methods have penetrated into all branches of journalism. A great periodical is a considerable undertaking to-day ; like a mine or a foundry, it is owned by a limited company. At its head there is à paid manager who is responsible to a board of directors. The undertaking which he directs is an enormous machine which is perpetually working and which shifts of workers must continuously furnish with the material it devours. I t is, in fact, easier to stop a weaving loom — 6— t h a n the printing presses of a newspaper. Considerable sums pass through its coffers. The cost of advertising alone reaches fantastic proportions ; in 1925 the newspapers of the United States received 750,000,000 dollars for advertisements. A French paper lets its advertisement pages for 5,000,000 francs. The raw material passing through the presses — the paper — involves the expenditure of large sums and the consumption of paper is increasing rapidly. For all the newspapers in the United States it increased from 1,519,000 tons in 1913 to 2,980,000 tons in 1925. The cost of the publication of all the English newspapers reached £62,000,000 in 1926. Some newspapers are very big affairs. One of them, a London daily, made a net profit of £226,000 in 1927, and was able to declare a dividend of 12% per cent. A new phenomenon is looming in the newspaper world and tends to accentuate this character of capitalistic enterprise ; it is a process of concentration, the formation of vast trusts aiming at controlling all or a part of the Press. In the United States these methods, which have been applied for some time, are beginning to convert certain companies, and hence certain men (who secure the control for themselves), into " newspaper kings ", just as there are " steel kings " and " automobile kings ". One of them who, at the beginning of his career in 1887, inherited a San Francisco newspaper from his father, is at the present time the owner of 24 daily papers, 14 weeklies, and 11 magazines, with a circulation of 13,000,000 copies ; this means that about 40,000,000 persons read his papers. About 38,000 employees work on his daily papers alone. The industrial character of such undertakings is clear ; thought is regarded merely as a commodity which must, according to the locality, assume the form the most likely to ensure its sale. Thus the trust in question does not scruple " t o blow hot in Chicago and cold in B o s t o n " 1 . This, it may be said by the way, is not necessarily and in itself an evil from the point of view of the journalist, since such trusts on a purely commercial basis willingly leave each new paper acquired to follow its own tendencies, whereas those trusts which may be called " trusts of opinion " modify the policy of the papers they acquire if it is contrary to their own, and thus force many members of their staffs' to resign and look for other employment. This concentration of the Press, which is already very advanced in the United States and which has begun in Europe, principally 1 The Journalist, March 1927. — 7— in Great Britain, is the subject of anxious comment in the journalists' professional organs. I t undoubtedly brings a new element into their life, though one which does not in any way contradict the previous tendencies in the evolution of the Press. Be t h a t as it may, the journalist of our day is dependent on a vast organisation of a more or less industrial type, and this is the power which determines the working and living conditions of journalists. I t is true t h a t the industrialisation of the Press has not everywhere reached the same stage ; according to the country, according to the paper, differences exist ; but, generally speaking, the important phenomenon which is rapidly transforming the Press, giving it a new aspect — even though it may sometimes do so only indirectly — and creating all kinds of new problems, is this penetration, this invasion, by the methods of big capital. Journalists have thus found themselves face to face simultaneously with difficulties proceeding from two main orders of facts : on one side, t h e change in the methods of running the paper ; on the other side, the economic upheaval of the post-war period, which affected all categories of workers and which had very serious effects on journalists. Hence two grave crises, the one material, the other moral. The moral crisis had its origin in the economic catastrophe of the last fifteen years, which resulted in what may be called a depreciation of intellectual work, and in the adoption of industrial methods by the Press which threatened to reduce thought to a mere ingredient in the commercial prosperity of the undertaking. The journalist, however, sets store by his intellectual status. He has opinions inseparable from his professional activity ; he wants liberty to express them. This liberty, which he won in times gone by and defended at the cost of long efforts against hostile public authorities, he will not see menaced nowadays by the new organisation of the Press. He has set to work to protect it by means some of which are purely moral, such as the right of signature (which will not be dealt with in this survey), and others economic, such as compensation in case of resignation for reasons of conscience, a matter which will be considered in a later chapter. The material crisis is serious. Provoked or aggravated to an equal extent by the transformation of the Press and the economic upheavals following on the war, it revealed an evil from which journalism has suffered since its beginnings, but which was becoming more and more threatening as the profession developed — — 8— incoherence, arbitrariness, the absence of a code which would define rights and duties, and would introduce a little order, and a t the same time a little justice, in the conditions in which this great modern profession is unfolding. This absence of a code, which is beginning to be remedied in certain countries, is a veritable anachronism. There is a striking contrast between the methodical organisation of everything which, in the Press of to-day, concerns the commercial running of the undertaking, and the lack of organisation as regards the riving conditions of the journalists. The incoherence of these conditions was less perceptible before the introduction of the methods of big capital into journalism. I t corresponded well enough to the organisation of the Press as a whole. There was, as in the old trades, a relationship between the owner and manager of a paper and his collaborators close enough to enable each individual's position to be examined from time to time in a friendly, or a t least a personal, way and to enable terms to be come to more or less satisfactorily. The new structure of the newspaper has built up before the intellectual collaborators an impersonal power which opposes a blind resistance to their individual efforts, and this at the very moment when the economic crisis, the transformations of the modern world (those, for example, due to the appearance of wireless telephony, which will not be without influence on the profession of the journalist), and the internal changes in journalistic work, such as the introduction of specialists, have created new problems the solution of which is an absolute necessity for the intellectual workers of the Press. On the whole the establishment of a code which the conditions of journalism urgently require to-day is in a sense facilitated by the evolution of the methods followed in the organisation of the Press. I n practice, it is easier to bring about standardisation in the journalistic profession under the regime of great undertakings than it would be when variety of publications and of traditions of work constituted serious obstacles. At the present time the needs of the big Press entail the specialisation and the régularisation of the work of journalists ; to ensure the uninterrupted working of the complex mechanism which the newspaper has become, it was necessary to impose a differentiated discipline and then to group the tasks. The modern journalist is, of all intellectual workers, one whose work, in spite of certain appearances, has the most rigid and the most regular character. The road is thus open to the introduction of a code. Journalists have insistently asked for it, and it — 9 — would be of great value to them to know of the experiments taking place, and the results obtained, wherever an attempt has been made to improve their living conditions. The Office greatly desired to undertake this investigation, but it foresaw the difficulties of an enquiry to be conducted in a domain which was innocent of statistics and in which the greatest diversity reigned. However, in 1925 a precise and pressing request was made. The International Association of Journalists accredited to the League of Nations, convinced t h a t it expressed the feelings of the world of the Press, pointed out the importance which journalists could not fail t o attach to an enquiry of this nature and the valuable service which it could do them. Acceding t o the desire of this important organisation, the Office decided to undertake the enquiry requested and began by issuing a questionnaire dealing with various aspects of the life of the journalist. This questionnaire, which is reproduced as an appendix, was addressed at various times to the principal journalistic organisations of the following countries : Argentine Republic, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Luxemburg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United States, Uruguay. In these thirty-three countries about sixty organisations, groups, and professional associations, and a certain number of individuals, were consulted. If the Office employed the method of the universal questionnaire for this enquiry, it was not without realising the serious disadvantages of t h a t procedure. These disadvantages were perhaps especially serious in a domain such as t h a t of journalism, where everything is nuance, where there are sheaves of individual cases, and where procedure by rigid questionnaire ran the risk of making the production of an accurate picture of the reality very difficult. This method, however, was decided upon firstly for budgetary reasons, as the considerable resources required by multiple enquiries carried out on the spot were not available, and secondly because it seemed t h a t the questionnaire method, even if it did not permit of arriving at a final result at the outset, nevertheless was at least a good means of clearing the ground beforehand and classifying the material. The Office, then, sent out its questionnaire without ignoring — 10 — the inherent defects of this means of investigation — slowness vagueness, gaps, etc. Most of these defects were met with. Some answers were long in coming, some never came. Many gave only vague and incomplete information.. I t is clear that in many countries the position of journalists is so varied, their conditions of work are so personal, t h a t no one could give a well-defined and complete account of the state of the profession. This is not to say t h a t the first stage of the enquiry gave no result. On the contrary, it placed the Office in possession of documentary material which,. if not abundant, was not without value. However, the question of completing it arose. The best method of doing this seemed to consist in making the material available to those concerned, in showing them what we had received, and asking t h e m if these first results seemed to them to constitute an adequate presentation of the facts. The collaboration of journalists which we had solicited for our questionnaire could thus be continued and developed by a common examination of the results obtained. I t was therefore decided to publish very briefly, in a kind of provisional report, without comment and in all its original aridity, the information we had received. This provisional report of about 100 pages, written and roneoed at the end of 1926, was presented to the principal journalistic organisations, and notably to the International Association of JournaMsts accredited to the League of Nations, which had, as it were, inspired the enquiry, and to the International Federation of Journalists, which had just been founded, and which from the beginning had been deeply interested in the enquiry. I t was also sent to the various associations and persons who had received the questionnaire. All were requested to send us such corrections and additions to the original documents as might seem appropriate to them. Once again the answers were slow in coming in. At t h a t moment important events were happening in the professional world, and the persons concerned who wished to inform us of these events were in no hurry, before they were fully accomplished, to send us information which might soon be out of date. If the long duration of the enquiry, which sometimes made necessary the revision and modification of information at first seeming to be final, is to be deplored from some points of view, it nevertheless permitted significant phenomena to be recorded in the process of development. The last two years of journalism have — 11 — heen very fertile. At a moment when the enquiry seemed almost «nded, we were faced with a new situation of the greatest importance, of which the constitution of the International Federation of Journalists was in itself an important factor. I t was necessary to recommence a good part of the enquiry in order to benefit from experiments being carried out and to keep our investigations, if possible, in harmony with the very active period into which journalism was entering. The documents received from various countries and the other information with which our enquiry furnished us enabled the present study to be written. I t makes no claim to exhaust the subject, but it a t least endeavours to touch upon the principal aspects of the professional life of the journalist. We do not flatter ourselves t h a t we have been able to avoid two reproaches which works of this kind generally encounter. Readers unrelated to journalism will possibly be rebuffed by the dryness of a text loaded with technical information, devoted to the analysis of the clauses of contracts or to the presentation of statistics ; but we wished to give a certain amount of precise information, and we hope t h a t it will not prevent persons who, while not belonging to journalism, wish to acquire an idea of the tendencies of a typical intellectual profession, from finding them reflected in those parts of the study which are on more general lines. Journalists, on the other hand, may consider t h e exposition of facts of which they know the complex reality to be rather summary. Certainly, the technical parts of our study are not sufficiently complete to dispense persons interested from further enquiry, if they would have a more detailed knowledge of the facts before taking action. But they will perhaps suffice to clear the ground and give a general view of the problems to be discussed. The collaboration of various national organisations of journalists has been very useful to the Office, as has been t h a t of international organisations, in the first rank of which we must once again mention the International Association of Journalists accredited to the League of Nations, which followed our work with interest after having suggested it, and the International Federation of Journalists, with which we have always been on cordial terms, and which made use of our labours and enabled us to make abundant use of theirs. The study which follows successively passes in review the general aspect of the profession, its composition, its organisation, — 12 — the status proper of the journalist and his conditions of work, the state of the labour market, and the insurance institutions established for journalists. Whenever the subject dealt with and the state of the documentation so permit, a triple survey has been drawn up, dealing first with the theoretical and general state of the question, secondly with the situation in various countries, and thirdly with the international action to which the problem may have given rise. I THE PROFESSION T H E TRAINING OF JOURNALISTS AND THE RECRUITING OF THE PROFESSION The question of the training of journalists is one of those on which the members of the profession have so far declared themselves with the least clearness. Opinion is very divided on the subject, and there is no agreement either on the utility of special education for journalists or on the form or the subjects of this education. The problem is not without interest. I t is linked with several other important questions, such as the general organisation of t h e profession and the constitution of a more or less closed corporation of journalists. I t is, moreover, engaging the attention of t h e classes concerned, and the organs of the various associations are devoting much space to it in their columns 1 . I t is not infrequently t h a t the assemblies of the national organisations of journalists discuss it ; recently, too, the Conference of Press Experts convened in August 1927 by the League of Nations added the question to its agenda. Two principal tendencies in the opinions expressed by the journalists of various countries may be distinguished. Some, holding t h a t the career of the journalist requires above all innate qualifications and natural talent, think t h a t a good general education acquired in no matter what school suffices to fashion such talent and t h a t practice in the profession constitutes the principal factor in the training of a good journalist. Practice is, in their opinion, the indispensable factor which the best education could not replace. They fear schools of journalism where there is the risk of artificially forcing natures which have no leanings towards the profession, and of launching on their careers a host of people doomed to unemployment, or ready to accept any pittance. Such people lower the conditions of employment for t h e entire profession. 1 1926. See, inter alia, the special number of the Deutsche Presse, Nos. 50-51, 24 Dec. — 14 — Others, persuaded t h a t the modern journalist needs not only wide culture which enables him t o interest the reader who is more or less educated and exacting, but also a sound professional training which may spare him many errors and hesitations in his first days in the profession, urge the creation of special schools of journalism, and even go so far as to propose the institution of certificates which alone would give access to the profession. They declare, moreover, t h a t the experience of many years has shown t h a t far from bringing into journalism numbers of persons withoutcapacity, the schools, with their very long and detailed courses, have turned many from the profession, the difficulties of which they had not imagined. The second tendency seems to be getting the upper hand of the first, which was partly the result of the fear of compromising t h e independence of the Press and the desire of safeguarding this independence — acquired at the cost of long efforts, and for whose sake journalism has had its martyrs — against any official education. I n any case several countries have created schools of journalism, and in many others their creation is demanded. People seem at present to be drawn more and more towards the opinion t h a t if journalism is in a way an a r t which requires a certain initial talent, those who practise it none the less need to make their talent fruitful by nourishing it with sound study, and do well to know, even before entering the profession, the ever more complex technique and the mechanism of modern journalism.. Teaching for journalists, such as it is or such as it is demanded by those concerned, may assume various forms. Sometimes it is purely preparatory and caters for young persons who know nothing at all of their profession. Sometimes it aims a t furnishing; supplementary courses for persons already practising journalism ; in this form may be included the articles which certain associations. of journalists publish in their organs for the use of their members. These methods are sometimes purely theoretical, going so far as. those of t h a t science of journalism which is studied in certain German institutes, sometimes entirely practical like those of the American laboratories conceived in imitation of a real newspaper editorial office. The existing schools are of relatively recent creation ; they have not yet been able to prove their worth or to find the ideal form of teaching. They are, however, now in sufficient numbers. to allow of abundant experiments. — 15 — The Australian universities endeavour to furnish young journalists with the means of learning their trade. The University of Queensland even delivers a diploma for journalists after an examination comprising a dozen subjects — history, geography, languages, political economy, etc. The Austrian journalists declare emphatically against the creation of schools of journalists. They do not see any danger in purely theoretical courses of journalism for the use of persons whose situation obliges them to keep themselves informed of the rôle of newspapers in modern life, but they take their stand against any teaching whose purpose is to prepare people for the journalistic profession. They consider the system in which the candidate is gradually initiated into his trade in the editorial room itself as far superior. Many young people in Austria begin thencareer as editorial stenographers. Their job, which is first of all to receive and to sift news, prepares them very well for the editorial table, where they generally find themselves sooner or later. The Belgian Press Association, on the other hand, created in April 1922 an Institute for Journalists, where courses in history, political economy, art, literary, and musical criticism, and law were organised. These courses were completed by practical exercises, handling of telegrams, law reports, etc. The courses were held in the evening from five to seven o'clock. Sixty pupils attended the first series, lasting two years, and earned a diploma delivered by the Institute at the end of their studies. There is no course in journalism in Brazil or Bulgaria. In Czechoslovakia, the budget for 1928 includes a sum of 750,000 crowns for the creation of a Higher School of Journalism, which will be created within the framework of the future High School for Political Sciences. In Germany since the armistice, schools of journalism have been created in sixteen universities, two technical schools, and five higher commercial schools. Among others may be mentioned the university institutes of Munich, Halle, and Heidelberg, the lastnamed dating from 1895, the Berlin Institute, and the Institute of the Nuremberg Higher Commercial School founded in 1923. The Nuremberg Institute, whose theoretical and practical courses — 16 — mingle in a fairly harmonious way, gives special place to the study of the rôle of the Press and of the psychology of the reader. The Institute of Journalism of Heidelberg, with its interesting Press laboratory (Zeitungsprobestelle), has built up a fairly high reputation by its methodical and thorough teaching. Grenerally speaking, journalists reproach these academic institutes with being more suitable for persons who wish to keep themselves informed of the development and the methods of the Press in a disinterested manner than for journalistic candidates desiring to learn their trade. The journalists' associations of Great Britain pay much attention to the training of members of the profession. The Congress •of the Institute of Journalists, which met a t Glasgow in 1926, had this question on its agenda. The advantages and the dangers of the scholastic training of journalists were discussed at length. The National Union of Journalists also deals frequently with this subject in its organ, The Journalist. Generally speaking it fears private schools of journalism, which are multiplying in England, throwing many amateurs on the labour market and contributing to lowering t h e conditions of employment in the profession. On the other hand, the Union takes great interest in the supplementary education of journalists who are already practising their profession ; it organises for this purpose courses in history, economics, and sociology such as t h a t instituted at Liverpool in the winter of 1926-1927. I t also facilitates the inscription of its members for higher correspondence «ourses, and has created an educational section in The Journalist. During its twentieth Assembly, held in April 1927, the Union passed a resolution instructing its committee to undertake negotiations with newspaper proprietors with a view to arranging for the creation of courses in journalism in various centres. An initiative — one of the most important in this direction — was taken by the University of London in 1919 when it created a cycle of courses in journalism. The courses, which deal with history, political sciences, psychology, etc., and which entitle the members to a diploma at the end of two years, are managed by a committee composed of professors, newspaper managers, and journalists. I n addition to the theoretical courses given by the professors of the University, there is practical instruction given by professional journalists. There are no courses for journalists in Hungary. An experiment made by a political party ended in failure. The lessons given by — 17 — Dr. Wunscher a t the University of Budapest are intended to inform the studious public of the developments of journalism and do not aim at training members of the profession. A school of journalism, which, it is hoped, will have a good effect on the development of the Indian Press was opened a t Madras in September 1927. Italy has long been without schools of journalism. Recently — on 15 March 1928 — a Fascist Faculty of Political Sciences was instituted at Perusa. I t is divided into five sections, of which one is devoted to politics and journalism. The teaching of this section comprises political history, modern and contemporary, the history of journalism, and comparative legislation relating to the Press. There is no school of journalism in Luxemburg or Portugal, The difficult life of the journalist in Spain is a reason why young people would perhaps show little eagerness to attend such courses. I t may however be mentioned t h a t the fifth Congress of the Latin Press, held at Madrid from 1 to 5 July 1927, adopted a resolution urging the creation of a School of Journalism at Madrid. There is no school of journalism in Sweden. The candidates for the profession in Sweden generally act as substitutes during the summer holiday period and obtain a permanent post after several temporary engagements of this type. In Switzerland the University of Zurich has courses for future journalists, but more often than not Swiss editorial offices are entered by means of occasional collaboration. Forty per cent, of Swiss journalists have gone directly from a higher school t o the newspaper, 60 per cent, coming from another profession. I t is in the united States t h a t schools of journalism have most decidedly assumed the character of professional institutes. Putting an end to the long polemics on the utility of journalistic education, Joseph Pulitzer, the celebrated founder of the New York World, was the first to create a school of journalism. I t was at Columbia University, and he endowed it with one million dollars. At the present time there are institutes of journalism 2 — 18 — in 28 State Universities and 19 State schools, and also in 50 private institutions. I n the course of the last five years the number of students in these schools has doubled. Schools of journalism belong to most widely varying types. Some, generally attached to higher agricultural institutes, prepare workers for the extensive rural Press ; others provide teaching more particularly commercial in character, as t h a t of Chicago. Still others, attached to old universities, emphasise the intellectual side of the profession. The teaching, general to begin with, later becomes highly specialised, and is thus perfectly adapted to the character of American journalism, which has arrived at a degree of specialisation unknown in Europe. The methods of teaching all tend towards the practical. Most of the schools publish a journal which the pupils, divided into classes, produce in the same conditions (especially of rapidity) as those of real publications. They practice the sorting of news and its presentation, the preparation of titles, headlines, etc., interviews, reporting, the drafting of educational articles on given subjects, and bibliographic notices ; they are also initiated into the commercial aspects of the newspaper, the scientific organisation of work, advertising, etc. A large number of schools award a certificate of Master of Arts in Journalism, following a theoretical examination which students can only take after a complete course of practical work. The schools of journalism enjoy the greatest favour with the members of the profession, and their graduates easily find work. I n the West it is not rare for pupils to be engaged before the termination of their studies, and the great newspapers of New York readily give responsible work to graduates of the institutes. ASPECTS AND COMPOSITION OP THE PROFESSION The journalist's profession is far from presenting the same aspect in all countries. For example, it may vary in importance ; journalism may be a veritable profession taking up the whole time of the person who practises it, but capable, on the other hand, of supporting him and his family, or it may be a spare-time profession, solely intended to supplement the income which a person derives from another profession. The difference between countries such as the United States, Austria, and Spain, from this point of view, is very considerable. — 19 — The degree of specialisation is also very unequal. A journalist is, on the whole, much less highly specialised in Europe than in the United States, where the industrialisation of the newspaper and the division of work have gone very far. The composition of the profession — t h a t is to say, the percentage of the various categories which collaborate in the production of the newspaper — may also be different from one country to another. Thus, the proportion of men to women, and t h a t of foreigners to natives practising the profession of journalism varies in different countries, as do the relative numbers of the outside contributors (occasional contributors having another profession, or contributors living by journalism) and the internal editorial staff. The proportion of journalists collaborating with several newspapers may be higher or lower in comparison with those who work for a single concern. Finally, the system of voluntary contributors may be more common in some countries than others ; in other words, according to the country, newspapers may have a weaker or a stronger tendency to accept unpaid articles furnished, for example, by persons who are simply seeking some notoriety of a political, scientific, or other order. Below will be found some information on these questions which, if they were closely examined, would provide not a little enlightenment as to the economic conditions and the degree of organisation of the members of the profession. A. — Aspects of the Profession First of all it may be asked whether journalism is everywhere a profession, and if it deserves the name in every respect. Certainly, wherever a big newspaper Press develops in the world, a corps of professional journalists is constituted ; according to the stage of development of this Press, and according to the form of certain traditions among the intellectual circles, this corps varies in strength, and is free to a greater or a less extent of a number of hindrances due to antiquated systems of journalism. The general tendency is certainly towards professionalism. I t seems t h a t people will become journalists more and more in the same way as they become architects or engineers or violinists — t h a t is to say, thanks to preparatory work, to experience beyond ordinary reach, and to knowledge perpetually brought up to date. These are factors which, not to mention innate propensities and initial talent, have already made many journalists indispensable to the modern newspaper. — 20 — There are still many people who practise journalism in addition t o their own profession (the so-called spare-time journalists), but they are diminishing in number. I n the great daily Press, occasional collaborators are now hardly ever recruited outside the ranks of specialists dealing with questions which the professional journalist could not know in all their technical or scientific complexity. Even considered from this aspect, an examination of the problem discloses a strong tendency towards journalistic professionalism. Instead of a progressive invasion of journalism by the non-professional specialist, there is to be observed, on the contrary, a marked increase in the range of journalism, a series of annexations which transform the members of other intellectual orders into specialised professional journalists. Thus, there is an ever-increasing number of doctors, jurists, and officers who have become purely and simply medical, legal, and military correspondents. Non-professionalism in the Press is, then, diminishing, but it has not been able to disappear entirely. There will always be authorities on certain subjects to whom editors will with advantage have recourse, so t h a t their readers may be furnished with information from the most competent sources. Moreover, journalists recognise t h a t the system is a reasonable one, and if certain of them have envisaged the possibility of reserving t o professional journalists alone the task of presenting to the public, in the form which their experience has shown to be the most efficacious, technical information which specialists have furnished, most of them content themselves with parrying this dangerous competition by endeavouring to obtain for outside contributors a remuneration equal to their own. Either because the action of organised professionals tends to enclose within narrow limits a practice which would cause them serious harm, or because editors have recognised t h a t it would be bad business to insert the prose of unqualified writers, even if it were acquired cheaply, amateurism is on the decline, and the papers which insert the "copy" of non-professionals are becoming fewer in number. An exception must obviously be made for publications championing political or religious opinions ; such papers are often mainly, or even entirely, written by persons for whom journalism is not a profession, men who derive their livelihood from another profession and who receive little or no remuneration for their collaboration. But even journals of this kind do not fail to constitute a team of professional collaborators — 21 — whenever they have the necessary means. I t is true that the means are often lacking owing to their relatively small circulation and the difficulty of getting advertisements, which, as is known, are the only means by which a newspaper can exist without outside help, since the selling price of a copy is far from covering its cost of production. Some prudent minds have thought it right to denounce the danger of this growing professionalism. They are afraid of seeing the journahst's profession walled up, and access to the newspaper barred to certain important movements of interest, to certain ideas, or to certain verdicts of opinion, to the expression of certain talent, which, even if it is not the talent of professional journalists, is none the less useful to the community. They are afraid, too, of seeing legitimate journalism petrified in routine under the shelter of its many defences. Partisans of professionalism reply t h a t journalism cannot be perfected, and that in fact it will not be perfected until those who practise it are able to give their whole time and energy to it ; further, t h a t this will not be possible unless their existence is assured by sufficient remuneration, and their work made tolerable by the establishment of good conditions. But only customs or regulations making the profession indisputably an important one, and protecting it against unfair competition, are capable of achieving this result. I n any case one is struck by the fact t h a t the Press associations, which formerly readily admitted, side by side with professional journalists, all kinds of persons — men of letters, professors, etc. — who only have occasional dealings with the newspaper, have a tendency to reconstitute themselves on a basis which is more strictly professional. The system of multiple collaboration also tends to diminish. As a rule the journalists combat it as encouraging low salaries, and endeavour to obtain from editors full-time employment sufficiently remunerated to obviate the necessity of their seeking work from other papers. The system by which voluntary contributors supply copy gratuitously for the sole pleasure of seeing their names or their ideas in the paper is even more vigorously attacked. There is naturally no question here of political or religious papers, whose existence is frequently entirely dependent on voluntary contributors, but of the use which the newspaper Press might be tempted to make of a certain amount of gratuitous copy. This system is also in full decline. I t is prohibited by certain collective agreements, and the customs of the Press them- — 22 — selves are more and more opposed to the whole, of the text of a great daily tors, more often than not permanent The aspect of the profession in described below. it. The greatest part, often is written by paid collaboraones. various countries is briefly In Austria journalism is considered as a full-time profession. Before the constitution of the Organisation of the Viennese Press, editors often had recourse to persons practising another profession — officials, teachers, etc. — but the efforts of the Organisation, which has" succeeded in getting the principle of equality of pay for the editorial staff proper and amateur journalists incorporated in contracts, have led to the abolition of this system, which is no longer practised except for columns requiring special knowledge, the medical and legal chronicles for example. I t may be said now t h a t if the technical periodicals are, as is natural, partly written b}? persons not belonging to the profession, the great daily Press is entirely reserved to professional journalists. Austrian journalists rarely practise multiple collaboration. A few only work for newspapers appearing early on Monday morning, as well as for their own paper. More numerous are those who, in addition to their regular employment, act as correspondents of foreign newspapers. But, on the whole, work for a single paper is much the most common. I t will be seen, moreover, when salaries are being discussed, t h a t the collective agreement in force in the Austrian Press forbids the writers of a daily paper to collaborate in any way with another paper, unless by special authorisation ; and it regulates collaboration with several papers belonging to one and the same publishing undertaking. The system of voluntary collaboration is formally prohibited by the collective agreement, which only makes exceptions for political papers, and then only on condition t h a t the permanent editorial staff of these papers make no objection. French journalists complain bitterly of "officials, professors, teachers, etc., people of all kinds of professions, who look for spare-time remuneration in journalism" 1 . They also denounce "men who for derisory salaries, or even gratuitously, not to speak of the cases in which they themselves pay in some form or other, 1 p. 24. SYNDICAT DES JOURNALISTES : Les conditions Paris, 1925. d'existence des journalistes, — 23 — do the work and take the places of the professionals" 1. These voluntary contributors are numerous on the small papers, and also insinuate themselves into certain great dailies. The Journalists' Association vigorously combats the amateurs, as it does the tendency to make journalism a spare-time profession. In Germany journalism constitutes a profession in the fullest sense of the word. I t is rarely t h a t anyone will be found to consider it merely as a spare-time occupation ; there are hardly any such persons outside the small towns. Furthermore, the German journalists are, in their very great majority, attached to one paper only. I t will be seen later on t h a t the collective agreement in force in the German Press does not allow a writer to work outside his hours of duty for another paper, except with the authorisation of his director. The number of voluntary contributors is insignificant. In Great Britain the professional journalists, numerous and well organised, are a little uneasy about the possible invasion of the newspaper by amateurs, not so much in the guise of voluntary contributors — they are few in number — but as collaborators belonging to other professions and undertaking journalism t o add to their income. This danger has become more threatening since the creation of several private schools which are prepared to give a rapid veneer of journalism to any person of intelligence, no matter who he may be. An article which appeared in April 1927 in a London weekly drew the attention of its readers to the advantages of occasional journalism, which "provides an interesting hobby, and is also a useful source of revenue " 2. The National Union of Journalists, without dissimulating the dangers of this state of mind, and such propaganda, thinks that the persons who allow themselves to be tempted by the hope of easy gain are storing up grave disillusionment for themselves. Its opinion is that, for the moment, it is sufficient t h a t care should be taken to maintain the working conditions of the professionals at a high level. This should be done by preventing conditions from being lowered by the offers of amateurs. 1 2 Ibid. Quoted by The Journalist, J u n e 1927, Vol. X, No. 6. — 24 — In Hungary journalism in the capital and in various important provincial centres is considered as a full-time profession. I t is rare to see it practised as a spare-time occupation. More frequently journalists are found exercising, side by side with their profession, less important functions, such as the secretaryship of associations, administrative posts in theatres, etc. Editors do not readily employ non-professionals. Multiple collaboration is fairly frequent owing to the system of trusts, which has reached a relatively high state of development in Hungary. A single publishing firm, for example, has grouped three newspapers, and most of the editorial staff of the firm work for all three papers. On the other hand, journalists working for different undertakings are few in number. Voluntary contributors are rare, and do not compete seriously with the professionals. Journalism has always been considered in Italy as a veritable profession, which should suffice to support those who exercise it. The present trade union organisation has still further accentuated the character of professionalism. Even in comparatively unimport a n t centres, where the practice of journalism hardly existed except as the complement of some other activity, the rigorous selection due to the new corporative methods has now given it a very marked professional character. Persons who do not make journalism their principal activity (the Italians call them "publicists") are not considered to come within the compass of the profession, and do not enjoy any guarantee or protection. Most journalists work for a single paper. A certain number, however, work for several undertakings, either because they are obliged to increase their income, or because certain political or other renown lays them open to numerous requests. Voluntary contributors are not numerous ; for the most part they are beginners, who need to make themselves known, but their competition does not in any way inconvenience the paid journalists. The Luxemburg papers have many collaborators employed in another profession, notably in primary or secondary education. Some of them contribute largely to the papers ; hence the journalists' association has not thought it right to exclude them from its membership. The remuneration often constitutes a — .25 — considerable addition to the income from their regular profession, but t h a t does not prevent the regular editorial staff from being able to live on its income in most cases without having to seek other resources. If the correspondents of foreign newspapers are excepted practically all the Luxemburg journalists work for a single paper. There are a certain number of voluntary contributors, but the paid journalists do not complain of their competition. While there are writers in Portugal who make journalism their main profession, there are others more numerous who only work for the Press to add to income acquired in commerce, banking, teaching, oi* public administrative services. This serious competition causes the remuneration allowed to the permanent workers of the paper to be insufficient, and obliges them in their turn to seek supplementary means in other activities. Another result of this state of affairs is t h a t persons desiring to devote themselves entirely to journalism are obliged to work for several papers. Those who have to practise this system may be estimated a t 30 per cent, of the total number of journalists. Voluntary contributors are numerous in Portugal, but the persistent efforts of professionals have succeeded in restricting them almost completely to technical or political chronicles. In Spain the great majority of journalists could not live by their profession alone. Journalism more often than not can only be a spare-time employment supplementing the income of persons employed in public or private administration or in commercial and banking undertakings, etc. If sometimes it is the main profession, it could not be the only profession, and those practising it are nearly always obliged to seek additional income in some other occupation. This state of affairs is largely due to the fact t h a t in Spain a newspaper which has not some political or religious character is hardly ever to be seen, and the services of the journalists are considered more as collaboration of an ideal nature than as professional work: The few persons who have given themselves entirely to journalism lead a precarious existence. However, the rise in the cost of living which followed the war, the new legislative provisions limiting the number of officials, thus rendering more difficult of access a profession which constantly found its complement in journalism, and finally a social conception which has given the intellectual worker a more lively appreciation — 26 — of his economic situation and his rights, seem to impel the collaborators of Spanish newspapers nowadays towards making journalism a more definite and independent profession. The system of multiple collaboration is not, however, common. On the other hand, voluntary contributors are numerous, although it is true they are diminishing in number, partly owing to the efforts of paid journalists. I n Sweden, on the other hand, most of the journalists can live by their profession, and the members of other callings who collaborate occasionally with the paper do not cause them any serious harm. I t is rare t h a t a Swedish journalist has to work for several papers. Voluntary contributors are very few in number. Most of the Swiss professional journalists find their sole source of income in journalism. The Swiss Press Association recognises as journalists in the proper sense of the word only persons who give the greater part of their time to the profession. About four-fifths of the journalists work for a single paper. The voluntary contributors as a rule supply : t copy" of a different kind from that of the professionals, and, apart from some unimportant exceptions, do not cause any harm to the latter. B. — Composition of the Profession Except in the United States and Brazil, it will be observed t h a t the corporation of journalists includes very few foreigners. In several countries, however, an increase in the number of foreigners has been noticed since the war, although it cannot be said that this increase is due to the considerations of an international order which have taken an eminent place in the minds of the masses. In fact, this curiosity about international affairs, which has obliged many papers to develop considerably the system of foreign correspondents, does not seem to have made it necessary to employ foreigners in editorial offices to a serious extent. The slight increase pointed out here and there seems to be rather the result of unemployment crises which have compelled many intellectuals to leave their country. These crises have, however, had less important effects in journalism than in many other professions, owing to the obstacle of language. — 27 — The absence of statistics makes the evaluation of the number of foreigners in journalism hi various countries very difficult. Only approximative information is available. Thus, for every thousand journalists, it is estimated t h a t there are 15 foreigners in Belgium, 40 in Czechoslovakia, 40 in France, 20 in Great Britain and Portugal. I n Austria — or, more exactly, at Vienna — foreigners are much more numerous than before the war. Most of them are political refugees from the neighbouring countries. Their number is insignificant in Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Netherlands, Poland, Rumania, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. There are none in Australia and none in Luxemburg. On the other hand, in the United States and Brazil they amount to 10 per cent, of the members of the profession, but in the latter country, in contrast with what is happening in the rest of the world, the number of foreigners is diminishing. Foreigners enjoy everywhere the same conditions of work as native-born journalists. Women are also scarce in the journalistic profession. They generally specialise in fashion, health, domestic economy, feminism, and sometimes in literary and art criticism. In the United States they are entrusted with some of the reporting. I n Australia there were, in January 1927, 85 women to 1,850 men practising journalism, or 4.48 .per cent. As regards Austria there were about 20 women in permanent employment with the Vienna newspapers, t h a t is, about 3 per cent. of the journalists at the capital. There is a slightly higher number of women not attached to a paper, but doing literary criticism or translations for the Press. The working conditions of women are specially regulated by the collective agreement in force. I n Belgium there are scarcely half a dozen women who are regularly employed on editorial work. I n Czechoslovakia there were about 30 women to every thousand journalists in January 1928 (3 per cent.). I n France there are 20 women for every thousand members of the Journalists' Association (2 per cent). In Germany, of 3,235 members of the Press Federation, there are 78 women, or about 2.5 per cent, of the total, and the percentage is certainly no higher outside the Federation. — 28 — There are about 400 women in Great Britain among about 7.000 members of the profession (7.71 per cent.) and six in Greece among 300 journalists (2 per cent.). I n Poland they amount to 6 or 7 per cent, of the members of the Press Association, and it is estimated t h a t the proportion is a little higher outside this organisation. I n the United States, according to the census of 1920, there were 5,730 women out of 34,197 persons employed on editorial and reporting work, that is, 16.7 per cent, of all the members of the profession. I n Brazil, Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Luxemburg, Netherlands, Portugal, Rumania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.S.S.R., they only represent an insignificant fraction of the total number of journalists. With the exception of Germany, Greece, Italy, and the United States, where they are sometimes not so well paid as men, women generally obtain working conditions identical with those of men. ORGANISATION O F THE PROFESSION I n the eyes of numerous journalists, the question of organising the members of the profession is one of capital importance. I t appears to them as the most vital factor in their economic and social status and the essential preliminary of any lasting improvement in their conditions. The evolution which Press associations have undergone as regards their form is a striking example of the general tendency to be observed in the intellectual professions towards a more and more accentuated trade unionism. For a certain number of years a closer grouping of brain workers has been remarked, as well as their adoption of methods clearly inspired by the trade unionism of the manual workers. I n succession, engineers, theatrical artistes, musicians, and teachers have united in self-defence. The movement is even extending, with certain changes in form, to classes of brain workers whose peculiar position of independence seemed to keep them outside the main current ; doctors, lawyers, and independent writers entered into association, no longer for the technical development of the profession purely and simply, but for the protection of their economic interests. This general tendency has shown itself even more vigorously in journalism than in the other professions. Latterly, at least — 29 — in some countries, it may be said t h a t the brain workers of the Press more than their colleagues in other professions have resolutely turned to trade union methods, and have applied them with a fertile perseverance. One is struck, in reading certain bulletins of national associations of journalists, with the resemblance which exists between' the aspect and tone of these organs and those of the industrial workers. This transformation — for it really is a profound transformation — which has taken place during the last two decades, has occurred under the pressure of circumstances ; hesitating at first and delayed by all sorts of experiments and contradictory efforts, it rapidly gained momentum as soon as the members of the profession in certain countries arrived, after ripe experience, at the conclusion t h a t it was henceforth their last resource. I n a general way and taking into account many peculiarly national circumstances, the development of trade union principles was effected parallel with the transformation of the Press and the constitution of a sharply defined professional journalism. As the great daily Press developed and the journalistic profession assumed a more and more definite form, the Press associations, which were purely idealist to begin with, were gradually penetrated by à spirit of professional solidarity which, under the influence of increasing material difficulties, changed into a definite determination to fight in self-defence. There was one critical moment in the history of journalism ; it was when, some twenty years ago, the rise of the great modern newspaper was taking place. I t was then t h a t the class of workers for whom journalism is a livelihood was formed. These workers were subjected to the methods of an increasing industrialisation ; they were numerous, but unorganised and powerless before the blind force which the Press began to be, and did not yet know how to find in the union of their scattered forces a counterpoise to t h a t power. In many countries the crisis was prolonged, but here and there the members of the profession tightened the bonds of neighbourliness and friendship which united them, and patiently forging an instrument of defence — the trade union — applied themselves methodically to the revision of their working conditions. The war, b y aggravating the economic difficulties from which journalists were suffering, precipitated the evolution. In countries in which there were no organisations at all, organisations were created, a t any rate friendly ones ; in countries where they already existed the transformation in harmony with trade union principles was — 30 — begun, and in countries where the weapon of trade unionism was available the foundation of a sound professional status was laid. Four countries were in the van of the movement — Austria, Germany, Great Britain, and Italy — and the start which they gained still confers on them a position of the highest importance. The trade union activity of the journalists of these countries ñs frequently held up by their colleagues in other countries as a model of professional defence. As the professional evolution did not take place everywhere in the same way, all kinds of associations are found in various countries at the present time, from the friendly union intended to create simple bonds of comradeship and to furnish means of distraction or of culture, to the professional organisation on a strictly trade union basis, passing by way of the mere mutual-aid association. I n several countries the old form continues ; in several others the transformation is taking place more or less quickly ; in some it is as good as finished, and the new methods are producing their full effect. The organisations are by no means all composed of the same elements. The friendly unions readily accept all members of the Press — writers, managers, owners, and even people unconnected with the Press or only in occasional relationship with it, for example, authors and artists. When their aims are merely mutual aid and welfare they are generally open to the entire journalistic world and usually to rich philanthropists as well. I n their latest form, in which they appear as a professional weapon, they adopt a more exclusive constitution and close their doors not only to publishers and managers, but usually to casual journalists also. Certain journalistic associations have a considerable administrative organisation with information, propaganda, and legal departments. They have a monthly, some even a weekly, organ, in which the news of the organisation appears and questions of doctrine are discussed. Once the trade union is fully and strongly constituted, there remains the problem of its attitude in the midst of the other organisations which form so close a network in the modern world, the problem of its relations with these organisations, and, possibly, its affiliation to one or other group. This is a thorny question which has been solved in different ways in different countries. — 31 — Sometimes, and this is usually the case, the journalists' association remains isolated, maintaining no relations with any other organisation, or only those of pure courtesy ; sometimes it draws closer to the intellectual workers' movement ; sometimes it veers towards the manual workers, and may not stop short of amhation pure and simple with a manual workers' organisation. These differences of attitude are dictated by reasons of doctrine or simply by reasons of trade union policy or even of professional psychology. Thus in some countries the journalists, penetrated above all by the intellectual character of their profession and persuaded t h a t this character is the fundamental thing which should determine the entire life of the profession, would not consider co-operation of any kind with the manual workers' trade union movement. I n this case either they feel t h a t the unifying principles which they have applied among themselves should be extended outside their ranks and hence they affihate themselves to the intellectual workers' movement, or they prefer to remain alone, united among themselves but independent of other organisations. This isolation is often forced on them by the insufficiency of the intellectual workers' movement, particularly in so far as it is a movement purely trade union in form. If they are resolved to remain outside manual workers' trade unionism they could not ally themselves with a movement — t h a t of the brain workers — which in many respects is far from having attained their degree of organisation, and which would rather be an obstacle to their action. Affiliation to the intellectual workers ' movement, such as it is at present, would in many cases signify for the journalists, who are much better prepared to take up arms for their profession. a return to a stage of development which has been left far behind 1 . They therefore renounce all- alliances and decide to act alone. Elsewhere, holding the opinion t h a t the journalist is before everything a worker and t h a t in questions involving the safeguarding of professional interests the quality of worker is more important than t h a t of intellectual, they have drawn closer to the oldest and the best organised combative movement in the labour world. They have allied themselves with some powerful industrial trade union, deliberately accepting all the obligations imposed by the rule of solidarity. "The day came", writes the general secretary 1 I t is true t h a t this remark is losing its force from day to day ; the intellectual workers' movement is rapidly advancing in the direction of trade unionism. The example of journalism has as a matter of fact contributed greatly to this evolution. — 32 — of one of these associations 1 , "when driven by the logic of events we decided t h a t just as unity between ourselves was good, unity with our fellow-workers in the industry would be good." Below will be found some information on the organisation of the members of the profession in various countries. The brevity of the survey for certain countries arises in some cases from the insufficiency of the information furnished by the organisations concerned and does not necessarily correspond to the actual importance of these organisations. More often t h a n not, however, the brevity of the text does correspond to a low state of trade union development. After a cursory description of the principal national associations, the important movement towards international organisation which has quite latterly made such remarkable progress will be described in some detail. I n Australia the Australian Journalists' Association has assumed the defence of the social and economic interests of the members of the profession. I t has succeeded in concluding important agreements with the Association of Newspaper Proprietors. I n Austria is found a striking example of t h a t progressive transformation of journalists' organisations which has already been referred to. Although the Austrian journalists were early in organising, their first association only set itself literary or artistic aims and envisaged purely friendly relationships. The Concordia Society, founded more than sixty years ago, grouped, in addition to journalists proper, independent authors and other persons having only occasional dealings with- the Press. B u t in contrast with many countries where this form of association long survived, evolution began very soon in Austria. I n fact a few years after its foundation the Concordia Society began to act in the social sphere by devoting the greatest care to the creation of pension and sickness insurance funds in favour of journalists and authors. These institutions acquired great importance in the course of several decades, and impelled the members of the profession towards a continuously crystallising comprehension of solidarity. The war completely annihilated the reserve funds of the welfare institutions of the Concordia Society. 1 The Journalist, Vol. X, No. 8, p. 1. — 33 — Apart from this Society, which gradually came under the influence of the Liberal Party, and in opposition to this political school, one or two other organisations were founded towards the end of the nineteenth century, namely, the Association of Authors of German Austria (which embraced the members of the ChristianSocial P a r t y and the National German Party) and the Union of Catholic Journalists. During the last phase of the war of 1914-1918 the creation, independently of all parties, of a journalists' association which would act in the economic and social sphere alone came to be ardently desired. In the autumn of 1917 the Organisation of the Viennese Press (Organisation der Wiener Presse) was founded and was entrusted with the defence of the material interests of the profession. I n 1922 the Concordia Society renounced everything relating to welfare and the Union of Catholic Journalists suspended its activities. On the other hand, the Organisation of the Viennese Press took steps from 1918 onwards to extend its defensive principles throughout the territory of the Republic. Analogous organisations were created in the principal centres. Those in the regions which the Treaties of Peace detached from the former Monarchy were united to the organisations of the newly formed countries ; the others constituted the National Organisation of Austrian Journalists (Reichsorganisation der Oesterreischischen Journalisten), the general management of which is entrusted to the Organisation of the Viennese Press. Finally a certain number of associations uniting special categories of journalists have been constituted at Vienna within the framework of the Organisation of the Viennese Press. Such associations are the Association of Dramatic Critics, the Association of Law Reporters, and the Syndicate of Sporting Journalists. All these associations are represented by delegates in the Organisation of the Viennese Press, which has charge of the defence of their economic interests. Only the special technical questions peculiar to each branch remain within the competence of the associations. The Organisation of the Viennese Press includes some 1,100 members ; it has to its credit the drafting of a series of agreements, of which the first was concluded in 1918 a little after the foundation of the new group ; it maintains close contact with the Union of Newspaper Employees and with the Union of Printing Workers. Apart from the relations which the Organisation maintains with the Association of Publishers by reason of the agreements 3 — 34 — which it is working out, it sometimes undertakes negotiations with this latter organisation on matters touching their common interests. Belgium has two important journalists' organisations, the Belgian Press Association and the Professional Union of the Belgian Press. In addition to these two, there are a few associations with political or religious leanings, such as the Association of Catholic Journalists, the Association of Liberal Journalists, and the Association of Socialist Journalists ; some are established on a specialised professional basis, like the Professional Association of Sporting Journalists, others on a regional basis, like the Association of the Newspaper Press of Ghent. Nowhere perhaps have journalists shown more hesitation than in Belgium in inclining their associations towards the use of trade union methods. I t seems t h a t Belgian journalists feared, for a longer time than their colleagues in other countries with big newspapers, to compromise their independence, and to lose the characteristics peculiar to their profession, by adopting a defensive attitude hitherto unknown in professional matters. The activity of the organisations of Brazilian journalists is displayed principally in the sphere of assistance and mutual aid. They do not concern themselves with the defence of the economic interests of the profession. Their policy is, moreover, very eclectic, for they accept indifferently employers and employees, and also intellectual workers of various other categories. If they had a desire to join some professional movement, it is to t h a t of the intellectual workers t h a t they would turn. In Bulgaria there are two organisations of journalists which are engaged in defending the interests of the profession, namely, the Sofia Association of Journalists and the Union of Provincial Journalists. The Sofia Association of Journalists has joined the Bulgarian Confederation of Intellectual Workers. Numerous efforts have been made in Canada to group the journalists on a firm basis, but they have had no more success than similar efforts in the United States. The Union of Canadian Journalists leads a rather precarious existence. — 35 — The Czechoslovak journalists are grouped geographically, or according to distinctions of nationality or professional specialisation, in several organisations, of which the principal are the Syndicate of Czechoslovak Journalists, the German Press Association, the Association of Czechoslovak Journalists, and the Organisation of Newswriters of the Czechoslovak Social-Democratic Party. Only the first two associations stand resolutely on the ground of professional defence. Together they include some 800 members, and both have adhered to the International Federation of Journalists. In Denmark there are several Press organisations. The principal aim of the oldest, the Journalists' Association (Journalistforeningen), is to guarantee retiring pensions t o its members. The Association of Copenhagen Journalists, founded twenty-five years ago, and the Association of Provincial Journalists deal with the defence of professional interests. I n French journalism, there are a great number of professional associations organised on a local basis, e. g. the Association of Parisian Journalists, or according to their political opinions, e.g. the Association of Republican Journalists, or finally, according to the professional category, e.g. the Association of Parliamentary Journalists. There are dozens of them in the capital alone. The purpose of all these associations, as defined in their rules, is the defence of the professional interests of their members ; b u t most of them have established no plan of action and have not ventured beyond mutual aid. Only the Association of Journalists, the seat of which is at Paris and which possesses local sections in various regions of France, has resolutely kept to the professional sphere. Founded in 1918, it comprised 700 members in 1923, and about 1,200 at the beginning of 1927. The proportion of Parisian journalists adhering to the Association is estimated a t 70 to 75 per cent. The Association of Journalists is in full development. I t s organisers are working t o forge t h e strong trade union weapon which the members of the profession desire. " We who are intellectuals exercising a liberal profession", said its secretary-general recently \ " have been forgotten, if not derided, and we were late 1 Bulletin du Syndicat des journalistes, Paris, No. 41, J u l y 1926, p . 2 : speech made a t Lille by Mr. G. BOUBDON. — 36 — in reaching the conception of professional defence. But we know what is involved. Lessons abound around us, and the example of the employers is not the least noticeable of them. They are teaching us t h a t the first condition of all collective action is trade union organisation. Except in t h a t form, there is no salvation for u s . " The rapid increase in the activity of the Association and the growing zeal of its members (it is significant t h a t an assembly in January 1927 decided almost unanimously to double the members' contributions) seemed to promise speedy success. For the moment the most solidly established conquests of the Association are in t h e domain of welfare. I t will be seen later on how it came about t h a t its efforts to improve working conditions have not so far achieved the results hoped for by journalists. In Germany there are several journalistic organisations ; three of them are concerned in varying degrees with professional defence — the Union of Catholic Journalists (Augustinus), the Union of the Labour Press (Verein Arbeiter-Presse), and the National Association of the German Press (Reichsverband der. deutschen Presse). The Union of the Labour Press, which only embraces writers of the Social-Democratic P a r t y Press, is, as may well be imagined, far from having the numerical importance of the National Association, but it has the merit of having obtained, more than twenty years ago, precise regulations on different points, including hours of work and the settlement of disputes. I t has kept its own welfare institutions, which are also of long standing. The National Association of the German Press is by far the most powerful of the German organisations ; numerically it is second among the journalistic associations of the world, and occupies a place in the front rank on account of its trade union activity. Founded in 1910, the National Association caters for professional journalists- without distinction of party. Its aim is " to watch over the common interests of the German Press in general and the professional interests of journalists in particular ". Its resources are those of a veritable trade union. I t is divided into twenty regional unions. Its membership which was 1,100 in 1919, when the Association was reorganised, is 4,400 at the present time. Every German journalist haying practised journalism as his principal profession for at least a year — 37 — may be a member, and he is entitled to the protection of the Association in every circumstance of his professional life. The activity of the Association in the realms of professional defence and welfare is remarkable. I n 1926 the central office received and despatched some 36,000 letters, an average of 100 a day. To this must be added more than 10,000 telephonic communications in the course of the year. Its archives at the present time contain approximately 12,000 files and deal with about 300 documents every day. The Association publishes a weekly organ, Die deutsche Press, to which it devotes about 20,000 marks a year, and which is a great propaganda power. The Association has accomplished work of the highest importance along the road which it has mapped out for itself. I t is work which develops from year t o year; it h a d in 1922 its first important result in the creation of a National Commission of Collaboration, and its crowning success in 1926 with the conclusion of a whole series of new agreements concerning working conditions, welfare, and the settlement of disputes. I t was on 25 April 1922 that the National Association of the German Press founded, with the Newspaper Industry Employers' Association, a National Commission of Collaboration composed of seven representatives of each of the two organisations concerned ; the expenses of the Commission were met in equal parts by the two organisations. The aim of the founders was to create " an organisation capable of adapting itself to the active evolution which the Press is undergoing under the influence of circumstances " \ Its duties were, among others, " to safeguard the dignity, the liberty, and the prestige of the Press and the social situation of its members ; to create a legal status of the Press adapted to present circumstances ; to watch over the journalistic training of recruits endowed with the necessary qualities and worthy of the profession ; to create a standard employment contract for permanent writers and collaborators ; to provide assistance in case of illness, old age and death, and for widows and orphans ; to create an office for assessment and for conciliation " 2. These tasks were immediately approached by the Commission. The representatives of the two parties found it a suitable instrument of negotiation and one which enabled them to devote themselves to important work on employment contracts and welfare 1 1 Satzung der Reichsarbeitsgemeinschajt Ibid. der deutschen Presse, § 2. — 38 — institutions \ The results of the work of this organisation, which has certainly rendered a great service to the entire Press, will be dealt with later on in this survey. Side by side with the National Commission, regional commissions of collaboration may be constituted among the associations affiliated to the two original organisations. These regional commissions are competent to draw up separate regulations, valid in their territory, but lapsing when general regulations are established by the National Commission, at least to the extent to which they do not correspond to the general regulations. Such, briefly outlined, are the principal results obtained by the National Association of the German Press, whose name will frequently be found in this survey side by side with those of three or four other journalistic organisations which have succeeded in bringing the profession into a strong position. The National Association is not affiliated t o the manual workers' movement nor to t h a t of the intellectual workers, but it collaborates in an intermittent manner with both. Great Britain possesses the strongest professional organisation of journalists in the world from the numerical point of view, and one of the most active in the trade union sphere. The National Union of Journalists, founded in 1907, had 4,480 members in 1924, and now has about 4,800, or nearly half the journalists of the country, who are estimated to number about 10,000. I t soon turned towards most pronounced trade union methods. Perhaps this movement was accentuated because side by side with the Union there existed another organisation, the Institute of Journalists, whose methods, very different in character, had not obtained adequate results in the opinion of many journalists, so t h a t the National Union was determined not to copy them. However this may be, the Union embarked on a resolutely trade union policy, which led it, as soon as it had introduced cohesion into its own organisation, to extend abroad the principles of solidarity which it had applied to itself. I t sought allies among the workers whose long experience in trade union matters had familiarised them with all the questions of remuneration in particular and working conditions in general which were occupying its attention ; in 1919, after a referendum among all its members, it 1 See the description of this work in Das meinschaft der deutschen Presse. Vertragswerk der Reichsarbeitsge- — 39 — affiliated itself to the Printing and Kindred Trades Federation, thus realising in the Press one of those rare instances in which intellectual and manual workers of a branch of production are organised together. This affiliation, to which the journalists grouped in the National Union strongly hold, was not open to question again until 1926. A certain opposition then seemed to declare itself. The Union had just been p u t into a very difficult position by the general strike called by the Trades Union Congress. The Printing Trades Federation had obeyed the strike order and the committee of the National Union of Journalists had to decide its attitude. I t concluded t h a t its obligations as an affiliated member obliged it to take part in the movement, and it gave instructions to this effect to all the members of the Union. A certain hesitation was perceptible in the ranks of the Union. Many members having doubts as to the interpretation of inter-trade union obligations, abstained from taking part in the movement, which, as a matter of fact, came to an end soon after. I t was in these circumstances t h a t a new ballot was held for the entire Union on the subject of the affiliation to the Printing Trades Federation. The result was an overwhelming majority in favour of the affiliation, which was consequently maintained. Many members of the Union, moreover, hold t h a t it has already rendered a great service to their cause. " I will not say " wrote the general secretary of the Union, " t h a t our Union would have utterly failed had it not allied itself to the other workers. I t would probably have succeeded in a degree, but not without many strikes and many lock-outs, and many incidents. . . . Our alliance with the Printing and Kindred Trades Federation made the path of progress smooth." 1 The activity of the National Union in safeguarding professional interests is noteworthy, and the results which it has obtained are of the highest.importance. We shall have occasion to examine them in detail in the various chapters on working conditions and welfare institutions. The Union publishes a monthly organ, The Journalist, which contains, in addition to news of the organisation and of the journalistic movement abroad, articles on trade union doctrine and articles of a general cultural nature for journalists who desire to complete their education. There is one question which is earnestly engaging the attention of British journalists at the moment, and t h a t is the possible amal1 The Journalist, Vol. X , No. 8, Aug. 1927, p . 1. — 40 — gamation of the National Union with the other important organisation, the Institute of Journalists. The Institute of Journalists, founded in 1890 (as a matter of fact it existed before then under the name of the National Association of Journalists) and endowed with a Royal Charter, is animated by a spirit different from t h a t of the National Union. Whereas the latter only accepts journalists who are not themselves employers of journalists, the Institute accepts employers, although it excludes them from certain of its committees which have to deal with working conditions. Generally speaking, the Institute appears to champion the journalists' cause, but less vigorously than the Union, or at least it proceeds by methods which appear to imply more caution and hesitation. The relations of the two organisations are sometimes rather strained ; a t other times, on the contrary, they improve, and numerous members of the Press who grieve to see the profession thus divided into two camps would like to take advantage of these moments of reconciliation to bring about an amalgamation. Negotiations have been undertaken at various times since 1916, but up to the present they have not succeeded. The National Union seems to fear t h a t amalgamation would only lead to a weakening of its trade union spirit, and t h a t its affiliation with the Printing Trades Federation would once again be open to question. I n spite of these difficulties, the attainment of unity in British journalism appears to be so fraught with advantages t h a t the idea of amalgamation seems to be making progress. A committee has been appointed to examine the means of realising it. I n Greece the Association of Press Writers maintains close contact with the Association of Newspaper Employees, with which it has even founded a common insurance fund. The interests of the Hungarian journalists are defended by three main organisations, the Hungarian Journalists' Association, the Hungarian Journalists' Pension Institution, and the Journalists' Hospital and Sanatorium Union. These organisations, as well as several others less important, are not attached to any trade union movement. In India there are two large groups of newspapers — those printed in English and those printed in Hindu. This distinction also governs the grouping of the journalists of the country. Those whose mother tongue is English belong to an organisation entitled — 41 — the Press Association, whose activity in the professional domain is very feeble, and the others, those who use one of the national languages, tend to group themselves apart. Thus it was latterly proposed to found an association of journalists whose language is Hindi. The Hindi Press is of recent formation, but as it caters for a very extensive public it may be destined to develop to a certain degree. Italy is one of the countries in which journaists have most successfully united with a view to protecting their professional interests. Sturdy associations were early constituted in various parts of the country. The most important of them, twenty-five in number, amalgamated more t h a n fifteen years ago to form a national organisation, which called itself the Italian Press Federation (Federazione nazionale della Stampa). The Federation set itself the tasks of working, by trade union methods, for the improvement of the material and moral conditions of the profession, and of watching over the liberty of the Press. Under the terms of its rules, it abstained from all political activity. The efforts of the Federation soon led to substantial results ; indeed, it is t o these efforts t h a t the Italian journalists owe the possession of a noteworthy collective agreement dating from 1911. In December 1925, following the reorganisation of the trade unions of the country on Fascist principles, the Press Federation joined the National Confederation of Fascist Trade Unions under the name of the Fascist Federation of Italian Journalists. I t modified its constitution by making it conform to the trade union policy of the Government, and once more changing its name, finally adopted that of the National Fascist Syndicate of Journalists (Sindacato Nazionale Fascista dei Giornalisti). Attached first of all, as were the theatrical artistes, to the National Federation of Fascist Industrial Trade Unions, one of the six large trade union groups, it was subsequently transferred by Royal Decree to the National Federation of Fascist Intellectual Workers' Trade Unions. At its head is a directorate composed of a secretary-general nominated by the secretary-general of the National Federation of Fascist Intellectual Workers' Trade Unions, and members elected by the General Assembly of the Syndicate. Among its aims may be mentioned the campaign against unemployment, the protection and the utilisation of its members' work, the extension and the — 42 — supervision of the enforcement of the laws relating to labour and welfare, the diffusion of general and technical culture among its members, and the propagation of the fundamental principles of Fascist trade unionism. The National Syndicate, which is the only professional organisation authorised by law, is composed of eleven regional syndicates. These accept only persons exclusively practising the profession of journalism. I t is they who constitute the professional register of the region (album), in which are inscribed the names of persons entitled to practise the profession \ The persons inscribed in the album are not obliged to belong to the Syndicate, and in fact the collective agreements concluded by the Syndicate (which alone is authorised by the Labour Charter to discuss working conditions with employers) extend to persons who do not belong to it. But its members are endowed with a privilege in the matter of employment. I t will be seen later 2 t h a t when vacancies occur, employers are bound to give preference to members of the Syndicate. The Fascist Syndicate has, as its name indicates, a definitely political character. By means of successive measures all the elements suspect in the eyes of the regime have been eliminated. Thus, in November 1926, the Rome correspondents of the Avanti and the Unità and other opposition papers were expelled from the Syndicate which had up till then "tolerated their presence owing to a conception, no longer held, of professional liberty" 3 . Simultaneously, at the end of April 1927, a communique of the secretariat of the National Syndicate announced t h a t the directorates of the regional syndicates had terminated the organisation of Italian journalists according to the principles of the National Directorate. The journalists who had occupied important posts on anti-Fascist papers at the time of the Matteoti affair were excluded not only from the Syndicate but also from the album. Those who had less important positions on these papers were simply invited to "manifest their sentiments with regard to the regime", after which their inscription in the album or in the Syndicate would be considered. Finally, it was decided t h a t only members of the Syndicate could occupy important positions in the newspapers which were faithful to the regime. The directing authorities hoped that in this way the Syndicate "firmly organised 1 2 3 Cf. "The Status of the Journalist", p . 67. Cf. "Methods of Finding Employment", p . 171. Italian Press of 3-4 Nov. 1926. — 43 — and disciplined would be able to turn journalism into an excellent political instrument at the orders of the Duce and of the party " 1 . The Fascist Syndicate has continued the work of the former Press Federation in connection with welfare and agreements. I n 1925 it succeeded the latter in the existing agreement, which was first redrafted with simple changes of names and subsequently underwent various modifications. Like the former Press Federation, it publishes a bulletin. The Japanese journalists have no professional defence organisation ; their associations aim only at developing friendly relations between the members of the profession. I n Latvia there is a Professional Union of Authors and Journalists which has undertaken the task of defending the interests of the profession. I n Luxemburg it was only towards the end of 1925 t h a t an organisation of journalists was constituted, with the name of the Association of Luxemburg Journalists. Although the new organisation was late in coming into the world, it skipped the stages of development usual with journalists' organisations, and assumed from the outset a fairly definite trade union form. There had been a question of admitting publishers to it, but the Constituent Assembly, which was held on 7 November 1925, decided to accept as members only paid workers who made journalism their main occupation. The Luxemburg journalists did not stop a t the creation of this first organisation. On 17 July 1927 they created another, entitled the Luxemburg Independent Journalists' Syndicate. The two organisations have a fairly similar programme of professional action. The principal difference between them resides in the fact t h a t the second intends to join the intellectual workers' movement (in which the first is less interested) and admits to membership free-lance journalists who do not make journalism their principal profession, a category which is fairly numerous in Luxemburg, as has been shown. Journalists in the Netherlands are grouped in the Association of Netherlands Journalists (Neederlandsche Journalistenkring) 1 Communiqué of the secretariat of the National Fascist Syndicate of Journalists of 30 April 1927. — 44 — founded in 1884, and which, at the moment of its fortieth anniversary in 1924, was composed of 578 members among the 600 or so journalists living in t h e country. I n several towns and regions of Poland there are journausts' associations which all belong to the Union of Journalists' Associations founded in 1924, with its seat at Warsaw. This union is not affiliated to any trade union movement. Portugal has four journalistic organisations — the Porto Association of Journalists and Writers, which is the oldest ; the Association of the Professional Workers of the Lisbon Press ; the Journalists' Home, an organisation whose purpose is the creation of a rest house ; and, finally, the recently founded Association of Portuguese Authors and Journalists. Only the Lisbon Association has definitely undertaken the protection of the economic interests of the profession. The other associations have more the character of friendly societies and mutual-aid societies. The Association of the Professional Workers of the Press is in close contact with the manual workers' movement. I n every important town of Rumania there are bodies of journalists who defend the moral and material interests of their members and who, when necessary, solicit the aid of the associations of the capital. Three large associations have their seat at Bucarest — the Association of Bucarest Journalists, the General Association of the Rumanian Press, and the Union of Professional Journalists. These associations are affiliated to the Rumanian Confederation of Intellectual Workers. I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom the journalists are united in the Journalists' Association, which displays considerable activity in matters of professional protection and welfare. There are organisations of journalists in about forty towns and regions of Spain : the most important of these are the Association of the Madrid Daily Press, the Association of Journalists (founded in 1913), the Association of the National Daily Press, the Bilbao Press Association, and the Malaga Press Association. Most of these organisations are mainly mutual-aid societies ; but they also endeavour to protect the professional interests i — 45 — of their members. Nearly all of them are grouped in two federations — the Federation of the Spanish Press, whose seat is a t Madrid, and the Federation of the Catalan Press, which also includes the journalists of the Balearic Islands. They are not affiliated to any trade union movement. The Association of Barcelona Journalists endeavoured to create a confederation of intellectual workers, to which journalists would have belonged, but its efforts were unsuccessful. In Sweden there are two organisations of journalists, the Press Association (Publicistklubben), founded in 1874, and which has preserved the form of the old Press associations (in addition to journalists it accepts publishers and other persons who have only a distant connection with the newspaper), and the Federation of Swedish Journalists (Svenska Journalistföreningen), created in 1901. Only the latter association is concerned with the defence of the economic interests of its members. The Swiss Press Association, which came into being nearly fifty years ago, embraced in its early days all those who were closely or distantly connected with the newspaper. Mr. Pierre Grellet writes in the Gazette de Lausanne : "Like all corporative bodies it had to effect a certain professional concentration and make the necessary distinction between those for whom journalism is the profession by which they live and those who consider it chiefly as a feather in their cap." The foundation in 1900 of the Society of Publishers favoured this evolution and allowed the Press Association to conclude a considerable number of professional agreements. During the last Assembly, which was held at Fribourg on 10 September 1927, the Association, now 750 members strong, still further accentuated its professional character by various measures, which, among other things, facilitated its adhesion to the International Federation of Journalists. I n the United States there is a great number of small Press clubs, which are principally concerned with the moral interests of their members. Five years ago there was founded an American Association of Newspaper Writers, whose principal aims were "to promote friendly relations among its members, to develop esprit de corps among them and to maintain the dignity and rights of the pro- — 46 — fession". I n 1926 it had barely 200 members scattered in most of the States. I n fact, American journalism is almost unprovided with professional organisations. The journalists of the U.S.S.E. are gathered together in the only authorised organisation — the Section of Press Workers — which was first of all attached to the Syndicate of Educational Workers, but which has belonged since 1926 to the Syndicate of Polygraphie Workers. The Section of Press Workers has about 25,000 members. Finally, in Uruguay the only journalistic organisation, the Press Club, seems to lead an uncertain existence. All these efforts towards association, which in some countries have reached such a high stage of development, have not remained within national limits. I n the international sphere, too, the work of organisation, begun many years ago and interrupted by the war, has advanced in recent times with giant strides, culminating in a concentration of forces without equal in the intellectual world. There are elsewhere organisations with a larger membership, but there are none more coherent by reason of their internal constitution and better prepared for action by the conciseness of their programme. I t is not to be wondered at t h a t the most interesting example of international professional cohesion in the intellectual world is found in the domain of journalism. The journalists were in fact led by their knowledge of foreign affairs, by t h a t contact between men of different countries which the functioning of the modern Press requires, to understandings which were rendered difficult of achievement for other brain workers by the conditions of isolation in which their work is still often performed. Moreover, the similarity of the situation and the interests of journalists in various countries was destined to facilitate the process of international grouping, and if there is any astonishment to be felt it is the astonishment at seeing a movement which is so natural occur so late. The slowness of the phenomenon, however, is not at all incomprehensible if account is taken of the repugnance which brain workers have always h a d for forms of association, in which they appear to see an abdication of their personal independence. I t was in 1890 that the International Union of Press Associations was founded ; its purpose was to bring together, in the — 47 — international sphere, all persons concerned with the Press, for t h e discussion of questions of interest to the profession. The Union accepted indifferently organisations of journalists, organisations of publishers, and mixed organisations. Before the war it held numerous congresses where various problems concerning the Press were discussed, and where the journalists of various countries learned to know each other better. The very comprehensive form of the Union nevertheless hindered it in the choice of a well-defined policy, and the spirit of the national organisations belonging t o it was, moreover, not favourable at t h a t time to specific action. Then came the war, which severed all relations between t h e affiliated organisations, and when hostilities were terminated the chasm remained. In the old Union there were no common interests powerful enough, no collective activity profound enough, t o enable the enmities and bitterness generated by the war to be forgotten. On one or two occasions efforts were made to restore a part of the old Union, but these efforts failed. The attempt was made with little enthusiasm as it was well realised t h a t a movement so truncated would lose half its efficacity, and t h a t , without injuring the cause which it was desired to further, it would not be possible to exclude organisations whose activities had been among the most fruitful of any. The confusion produced by t h e war among the membership of the former Union created a state of mind unfavourable to the reorganisation of the international movement, and it seemed to some people t h a t this reorganisation could only be achieved on a quite new foundation. The form and the spirit of the national associations and the attitude of journalists of various countries to professional problems had, moreover, considerably changed since the war. The first move was made in France. The Association of French Journalists convened the representatives of the organisations of various countries at Paris, on 12 June 1926, for the purpose of discussing the creation of an International Federation of Journalists. After two days of work the delegates of some twenty countries drew up in outline the constitution of the new organisation, and pointed out the road along which it should direct ita first efforts. I t was decided t h a t a Congress should be called i n September to ratify the Paris decisions, to adopt a definitive status, to give the nascent federation a financial foundation, and to fix the details of its programme. This first Congress was held at Geneva on 24 and 25 September — 48 — 1926. The journalists' associations of the following countries were represented : Austria, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Poland, Rumania, Serb-CroatSlovene Kingdom, and Spain. The Spanish interests were represented by the French delegation ; the Rumanian interests by the Polish delegation ; the Norwegian and Swiss associations, although they did not yet belong to the new Federation, each sent an observer. Representatives of the International Labour Office, the Secretariat of the League of Nations, the International Institute of Intellectual Co-operation, and the Association of Journalists accredited to the League of Nations, also took part in the Congress. During the four meetings which the Congress held, the constitution of the new Federation was drafted, and the necessary steps were taken to ensure its activity until the next Congress, which was t o be held in the autumn of 1928. The Congress also took note of the provisional report on the working conditions of journalists, which had been diawn up by the International Labour Office with the help of the first answers received to its questionnaire, and decided to render all possible aid to the Office in the completion of its enquiry. The International Federation of Journalists is formed "of associations, unions, or syndicates of professional journalists, t h a t is to say, organisations whose members are exclusively journalists attached to the ordinary editorial offices of newspapers or news agencies, who make journalism their principal profession, provided t h a t these organisations are constituted for the defence of their rights and professional interests and for the improvement of conditions in which the profession is exercised in various countries" \ " I t s purpose is, notably, to safeguard in all possible ways the liberty of the Press and of journalism which it will endeavour to have guaranteed by law ; " T h e elaboration, preservation, and publication of statistical and other documents of a nature to assist in the work of defending professional interests ; " T h e study of formulas capable of bringing about the institution of standard contracts for individual ox collective employment, and the general surveillance of the enforcement of these contracts wherever they have been accepted ; 1 Statutes, Article 1. — 49 — •The examination of the methods of assistance and welfare most suitable to the profession, and their appUcation for the benefit of organisations which may desire to take advantage of them ; •' The extension to journalists of all countries of the advantages and the rights won by national associations ; " I n adhering to the Federation every association implicitly recognises the principles of trade union organisation, which are, essentially, the establishment of an employment contract, the determination of the minimum wage, and the recognition of a conciliation procedure for all disputes which arise between a journalist and the paper for which he works, and it undertakes t h a t its activity shall be in conformity with these principles." 1 The Federation has a permanent secretariat administered by a secretary-general, elected for four years, and an executive committee composed of two members for every country affiliated. The executive committee meets once in six months. The bureau of the Federation, composed of the presidents, treasurers, and secretaries, meets more frequently. I n addition to these organs, the Federation has instituted special committees in various countries, a step which, without threatening to bring about an excessive decentralisation which would militate against the vigour of the common work, promotes a fruitful circulation of ideas and encourages, or revives, the zeal of affiliated associations. These committees are : the committee on documentation, publications and archives, a t Paris ; the legal committee, at Berlin ; the technical committee, at Geneva ; the committee on assistance and welfare, at Vienna ; the propaganda committee, at London ; and the financial committee, at Paris 2. At the present time the International Federation of Journalists comprises twenty-two organisations in the following eighteen countries : Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Latvia, Norway, Poland, Rumania, Spain, Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, and Switzerland. The members number about 25,000 in all. During the first eighteen months of its existence the Federation 1 Statutes, Article 2. Not all these committees began their activities a t the same time. Technical Committee has not yet been formed. 2 The 4 — 50 — has shown remarkable activity. Interesting discussions took place at the first three meetings of the executive committee held in 1926 and 1927, and important pieces of work, memoranda, and studies, have been elaborated either by the secretariat or by the various special committees. For instance, in J a n u a r y and February 1927 the secretariat assembled a series of collective agreements in force in a certain number of countries and compiled an index of the subjects contained in these agreements. The legal and welfare committees have also undertaken important investigations relating to the questions within their competence. As regards the executive committee, it has drafted a certain number of proposals concerning notice of termination of services, indemnity for dismissal, and special jurisdictions, problems which the Geneva Congress had placed on the programme of the Federation for immediate action. Lastly, in November and December 1927, the secretariat published in the monthly bulletin of the Federation (Bulletin mensuel) a draft model agreement drawn u p on the lines of the principal existing agreements, and model rules for associations of journalists for countries in which the profession is not yet organised, or which desire to renovate an obsolete society. The Federation maintains close relations with the official international institutions — the International Labour Office, the Secretariat of the League of Nations, and the International Institute of Intellectual Co-operation — and, among other things, it has greatly facilitated the accomplishment of the present enquiry, When the League of Nations convened a Conference of Press Experts at Geneva, at the end of August 1927, for the purpose of seeking means of ensuring easier and cheaper transmission of news and of discussing professional questions whose solution might contribute to the pacification of public opinion in various countries, the International Federation of Journalists was invited to be represented, side by side with directors of agencies and of newspapers, and representatives of Government Press bureaux and various other organisations. The representatives of the Federation, Mr. Stephen Valot, secretary-general, Mr. Richardson of the British association, and Mr. Stern-Rubarth of the German association, soon came to the front in the discussions. Many of their proposals, countersigned by the representatives of other organisations, were adopted by the Conference, notably those relating to collective journeys for journalists, schools of journalism, reduced rates on railways and ships, and an international identity card for journalists. In connection with the last subject, the — 51 — three delegates submitted the card considered and adopted by the Federation — a model of precision and convenience. Relations with the International Labour Office have been equally close. When, on 19 December 1927, the time came.for nominating the members of the Advisory Committee on Intellectual Workers which the Governing Body of the Office had decided to constitute to aid it in its work, the three members of the Governing Body and the two members of the Committee on Intellectual Co-operation entrusted with the task of choosing the most representative international organisations, included the International Federation of Journalists among their number. For the moment the Federation acts alone. I t has not thought it necessary to join the International Confederation of Intellectual Workers, with which, however, its relations are excellent, as they are with other Press organisations, in spite of a dispute which momentarily arose in 1927 with the former Union of Press Associations, then in process of reconstitution. The latter, in fact, after several fruitless efforts to re-establish itself, succeeded in November 1926, five months after the foundation of the International Federation of Journalists, in holding a conference where the question of universality, which was such a grave obstacle to its resuscitation, was settled. I t was decided that an attempt should be made to re-establish the Union according to its pre-war principles, and negotiations were carried out with the organisations of the former Central Powers. I n July 1927 a congress was held in London, and the organisers accepted the exclusion of all discussion relating to the status of journalists, which the representatives of organisations affiliated to the International Federation of Journalists had demanded as the condition of their presence. During the course of the Congress, dissension broke out on this subject between the members of the Union and those of the Federation ; it was soon healed, but it showed the need of arriving at an understanding and a delimitation of the respective spheres of the two organisations. The understanding appears to be materialising. I t seems t h a t the Union will renounce all action in the special domain of working conditions, and will endeavour to be the mixed organisation in which journalists, internationally organised in their Federation, will be able to meet managers and publishers of newspapers, who themselves are organised in their own fashion. The composition of the Union, which admits indifferently associations of journalists. or of publishers, or mixed associations, seems to be predestined to — 52 — facilitate such a rôle. In this way would disappear a certain rivalry extremely harmful to the cause which the organisations concerned desire to champion. I n addition to these two organisations, there are a certain number of international associations which will not be taken into account, because they only include publishers, for example, the International Association of the Technical Press, or because they are exclusively interested in the technical development of the profession, which is the case with certain societies of specialised journalists. I t is appropriate, however, to refer to some associations which, without having the improvement of economic and social conditions of journalists as their sole or principal aim, are nevertheless highly interested in this question. I n the very front rank of these organisations is the International Association of Journalists accredited to the League of Nations, whose seat is at Geneva. Founded in 1921, it groups the professional journalists who regularly follow the work of the League of Nations, and its purpose is to safeguard their professional interests and to facilitate the accomplishment of their mission by the improvement of the technical means of information and transmission. Although the Association only comprises a rather small number of individual members, it enjoys considerable influence by reason of its ceaseless collaboration with the League of Nations. I t is this Association, as has already been said, that launched the idea of the international enquiry undertaken by the International Labour Office, whose results form the subject of this volume, and there is no doubt t h a t this initiative powerfully contributed towards the constitution of an International Federation designed to study and develop the journalistic movement in so far as professional interests are concerned. The Association has followed the development of the enquiry by the International Labour Office with interest, and has afforded the Office its most cordial assistance. I t played a p a r t of the highest importance in the preparation and the proceedings of the Conference of Experts convened by the League of Nations in August 1927, and it has come to an understanding with the International Federation of Journalists for the submission of several proposals relating t o the economic and moral interests of journalists. Finally, there was founded quite recently at Paris an International Bureau of Catholic Journalists. The Catholic journalists of various countries, noting the development latterly achieved — 53 — by the international movement of journalists, and their interest in professional questions — revealed by initiatives such as the Conference of Press Experts convened by the League of Nations, and the work of the International Labour Office relating to the material conditions of the existence of journalists — were of the opinion that, while participating in the movement, either in national associations or in neutral international organisations, they should approach the problems under discussion from the point of view, and according to the social and moral principles, which are peculiar to themselves. I t is for this reason t h a t the Association of French Catholic Journalists, with the co-operation of the Catholic Committee on Intellectual Co-operation, convened the representatives of the principal national organisations of Catholic journalists at Paris, from 14 t o 18 December 1927. These organisations decided upon the creation of an international bureau which should pursue " a precise objective : the study and if necessary the defence of well-defined professional interests" 1. The addition, an organisation known as the World Press Congress, which for the moment groups American journalists, and which up to the present has held three assemblies a t San Francisco, Honolulu, and Geneva (1927), for the purpose of "establishing the highest possible level and the maximum of well-being in the P r e s s " practically completes the number of the various international bodies endeavouring to co-ordinate efforts bearing on the professional interests of journalists. Henceforth these efforts cannot be studied unless the greatest attention is paid to activities such as those of the International Federation of Journalists, which is beginning to exercise undeniable influence on the development of national movements. 1 La Vie catholique, 17 Dec. 1927. II THE STATUS OF THE JOURNALIST The engagement, the work, the cessation of employment of a journalist, and in a general way the aggregate of relationships existing between the employee of a paper and its publisher may be determined by four different methods : (1) by simple verbal agreement ; (2) by individual written contract ; (3) by collective agreement ; (4) by law. Generally speaking, it is in the order in which they are enumerated that these four methods have occurred chronologically ; in fact, the history of journalism shows that after having been governed by the system of verbal agreement, the work of the journalist was subjected to that of the individual written contract, which finally gave place to the system of collective agreements and legislation. Certainly, this remark, general as it is, is not absolute and does not pretend to establish a standardised hierarchy among the systems. Here the journalists have passed without intermediate stages from the verbal agreement to the collective agreement ; there they have passed from the individual contract to the law. Elsewhere forms which are theoretically successive — verbal agreements and written contracts — co-exist. It is possible also that all the different solutions determined by circumstances are equally good. In any case, this exposé of facts is not at all the place to discuss such a question of doctrine. The verbal agreement which existed almost everywhere at the dawn of journalism survives at the present time in certain countries, either owing to attachment to certain customs, or because journalism in these countries has held to old forms and has not been affected by the industrialisation of the great modern newspaper, or, again, because even if it has been affected by this industrialisation it has maintained old systems of employment owing to the inaction and the impotence of the journalists. The verbal agreement is, as its name indicates, the result of a mere discussion between employers and employees, not giving rise — 55 — to any document ; capable of being prolonged without vicissitudes if the two parties preserve a good understanding, it does not give them any real security and risks causing them serious embarrassment and, to one of them at least, serious injury, if they cease to work in harmony. A verbal agreement, although subject to arbitrariness and to caprice, is not completely subordinated to one or the other. There are, in journalism, as in other professions, customs and usages, often tyrannical, which it is not easy to dispense with. These customs are u p to a certain point a guarantee for the employee ; they defend him against complete arbitrariness and ensure a certain uniformity, more or less equitable, in conditions of employment. But they are harmful to him, on the other hand, first of all because they are customs which it is not impossible to infringe to his detriment, and secondly because in spite of all the fragility which they may disclose to his disadvantage, they are apt to acquire, according to circumstances, an implacable rigidity which is well calculated to crush any attempt on his part to improve his situation. I t . must also be recognised t h a t customs often do not correspond to the situation thrust on the employee by the march of events. Everywhere to-day customs age quickly ; they are often very old things which have not been able to keep abreast of progress. I n a profession like journalism which has developed in a vertiginous way, customs, although not belonging to a period of great antiquity, are nevertheless not those of our own times. They have remained immutable, or they have changed so little t h a t they no longer correspond to reality, whereas conditions have visibly changed. For these reasons an agreement founded simply on custom runs a great risk, apart from the insecurity caused by the absence of documents and signatures, of creating an anachronous situation and of gravely harming a man who is obliged to work under antiquated conditions while living in the modern world. The individual written contract has the advantage of giving to its signatories a security which the verbal agreement does not furnish. I t serves as the basis for the settlement of disputes which may arise between employer and employee, and furnishes each of them with a t least the possibility of appealing to the provisions — sometimes very vague ones it is true — of the Civil Code concerning the hiring of labour. On the other hand, it has the defect of being founded only on custom, with the exception of the possible provisions — always very general — of the Civil Code. — 56 — Journalists have so well realised the inconveniences of these systems of individual contracts, oral and written, t h a t they have boldly followed in the footsteps of the manual workers and have sought to obtain the establishment of collective agreements capable of giving them all the advantages of a general and uniform determination of the conditions of work. The collective agreement which organisations of employers and employees sign and which regulates conditions of work, no longer for individual cases but for great numbers of persons, may vary in its scope. Sometimes it only covers a fraction of the conditions of work, for example, the collective agreement governing wages ; sometimes it only applies to one or two categories of workers, the outside contributors of the paper, for example, or artists and photographers. I t may also vary in precision, be more or less detailed ; it may merely give the general principles which should serve as a base for individual contracts, or, on the other hand, it may exactly indicate working conditions with such completeness t h a t individual contracts do no more t h a n reproduce its clauses or refer to them. The collective agreement, in the eyes of journalists, constitutes an immense progress from the individual contract, oral or written. I t may be said t h a t the principal aim of their professional organisation, which formerly, as has been said, was to provide mutual aid, is now to obtain, maintain, and improve collective agreements. I t is certain t h a t the collective agreement affords great advantages. I n the first place it determines a uniform regulation of working conditions, thus guaranteeing the maximum of equity and making possible the simplification of the conditions of engagement, as well as enabling greater stability in the management of the newspaper to be achieved. If it only possessed the advantage of codifying and unifying existing customs, its worth would not be open to doubt. But t h a t is not its only value ; the conclusion of the collective agreement and its maintenance imply the existence of firmly constituted professional organisations. To secure a collective agreement the professional organisation had to be possessed of vitality, and to be endowed with energy such that it could obtain, as a rule, not only a unification of the working conditions, but also their improvement. I n fact it is rarely that a collective agreement does not introduce some happy innovation. And these innovations are not the last. The agreement is valid for a certain period, at the end of which its — 57 — renewal is discussed. At this moment it is not isolated individuals, b u t the entire organisation which comes forward to take part in the discussion. I t has a good chance of stating its views afresh, of getting a t any rate some of its claims accepted, and of securing the signature of a new agreement which will be superior to the old. Generally speaking, the collective agreement, not only regularises conditions of work, but is also the instrument by which valuable improvements are secured, and it is thus the guarantee of future improvements. Moreover, it is far from having advantages for the workers only. The employers also derive benefit from it, if only from the guarantees which it provides against the competition of neighbouring undertakings, from the suppression of perpetual and frequently costly disputes which are generated by chaotic conditions of employment, and lastly from the pacification of the discontent and bitterness which deprives their collaborators of t h e good-will and enthusiasm which are so necessary to the smooth running of the undertaking. Lastly, the law sometimes lends the journalists the aid of its sanctions. Legislation may concern the journalists in several ways. Sometimes there are general laws t o which both manual and brain workers are subject, as is the case in Great Britain with regard t o compensation for accidents. Sometimes there are laws more limited in their scope, applying, for example, only to nonmanual workers or a part of them, the " employees ", and it may happen as it does in Luxemburg, t h a t the definition of this term enables journalists to be included. Sometimes journalists are expressly and specially referred to. The laws of this last kind may be general or particular ; in other words they may regulate the aggregate of the working conditions of journalists and determine their status in its entirety, as in the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, or they may refer only to some of these conditions, weekly rest, for example, as in France. Again, it may happen t h a t the laws of limited scope applying only to manual workers and not journalists, nevertheless affect the latter in an indirect way. Without being governed by the law they experience its after-effects ; this is what occurs in Hungary where the prohibition of Sunday work in the printing trade ensures the weekly rest of journalists. As journalists endeavour to obtain collective agreements, so do they endeavour to secure the passing of laws covering their particular status. They rightly think t h a t general laws, or those, more restricted, which relate to the large class of private employees, — 58 — cannot fully meet their case. The conditions of journalistic work are so exceptional, they are different in so many ways from those of manual work, from those of " employees ", and even from those of other intellectual professions, that it would be impossible to arrive at a reasonable and efficacious regime for journalists except by means of special laws. This has been understood in two or three countries where there are legislative provisions applying expressly to the status of journalists, either in its entirety, or in part. As a rule, journalists consider the establishment of such laws as the consummation of their efforts. A certain number of them; however, prefer the system of collective agreements as being more supple, and capable of more rapid modification at the bidding of circumstances. It is possible, moreover, to harmonise the two systems, and incorporate in the law only the obligation to conclude agreements, the enumeration of the points which these agreements should cover, and the statement of the fundamental principles which should be taken into account in regulating the working conditions of the journalist, while the details are left to be incorporated in the agreements themselves. A brief analysis will now be made to determine what are the factors — usages, verbal agreements, individual contracts, collective agreements, legislative provisions — which determine the status of journalism in various countries. The Australian journalists benefit from a double collective agreement which came into force in 1924 and regulates questions of salaries, hours of work, holidays, settlement of disputes, etc., for metropolitan and provincial journalists. This agreement, which adopted — while improving and completing them — regulations dating from 1917 and springing from a decision of the Federal Arbitration Court, applies to all categories of newspaper workers from the editor to artists and photographers, and extends to the States of New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Queensland, Western Australia and Tasmania. Thanks to this agreement, which contains some very interesting clauses, Australian journalists are among the members of the profession possessing the most satisfactory status. In Austria, the journalists long ago obtained regulation of working conditions by agreement, and statutory provisions have since reinforced them. — 59 — It was in the spring of 1918, a few months after its foundation, that the Organisation of the Viennese Press concluded its first collective agreement with the Association of Daily Papers. It was, as a matter of fact, only a simple agreement for rates of payment, but in view of the importance which questions of remuneration have always had, and the acuteness of this problem during and immediately after the war in certain countries, we cannot do otherwise than draw attention to the value of the result obtained by the Austrian journalists. The agreement of 1918 underwent several modifications in accordance with the changes in the price level consequent upon the monetary crisis. Finally, in March 1921, a new collective agreement came into force. Pounded on the law newly passed relating to journalists, it went much further than its predecessor as regards salaries, and, in addition, settled a number of other questions. This agreement, which is prolonged automatically from year to year if it is not denounced by one of the parties two months in advance, has only undergone slight changes since 1921, notably on 1 March 1923, and it is still in force. Legislation furnished a firm foundation for the agreement which had been begun to be built up. On 11 February 1920 an Act relating to journalists was passed laying down a number of very interesting principles. Under the terms of the Act (section 2), every Press writer, on the day he takes up his duties, must be furnished with a contract of employment containing a precise description of the nature of the employment and specifying the rates of salary, special fees, and contingent allowances for out of pocket expenses, the rate of increments to be granted at least once in five years, the length of holidays and the period of notice to be given on the cancellation of the contract. The Act of 1920 applies to all professional journalists who make journalism their principal vocation, whether they belong to daily, weekly, monthly, technical, scientific, or industrial organs or to bulletins of associations, etc. The collective agreement of the Viennese Press, on the other hand, extended only to the daily papers of the capital, to which a number of political organs appearing on Mondays and two or three other weeklies were subsequently added. It must, however, also be mentioned that in all the important towns collective agreements similar to the Viennese agreement have been concluded. The present tendency is to fuse these various regional agreements into — 60 — a single national agreement, but this work of unification encounters certain difficulties owing to the diversity of the working conditions of journalists in various parts of the country. The collective agreement of the Viennese Press, which may be taken as an example and a model of the entire network of agreements of the Austrian journalists, relates to permanent writers and artists (in receipt of fixed remuneration), the regular contributors (writers paid by the line or by lump sum), editorial stenographers 1, and permanent foreign correspondents. It is one of the most complete and the most detailed of existing agreements. Its clauses bear upon the nature of the work, salaries (fixed remuneration, increments, salaries by the line or in a lump sum, out-ofpocket expenses, dates of payments), welfare, multiple collaboration, hours of work, night work, weekly rest, holidays, sick leave, the right to work and the refusal to work, termination of services, special conditions of regular contributors, changes in the editorial policy of the paper, the sale of the undertaking, and the settlement of disputes. An appendix to the agreement indicates the salary rates for various categories of posts and various kinds of work paid by the line. The Organisation of the Viennese Press has established a model individual contract which is employed in most undertakings ; it is based on the Act of 11 February 1920 and on the collective agreement in force. The individual contracts established in conformity with the terms of the collective agreement are generally signed for an indefinite period. When on rare occasions a time limit is assigned. it is fixed at several years ahead. There is only one instance of life contracts, and those are in respect of a group of some ten writers who had belonged to the Wiener Tageblatt and were engaged by the Neuer Wiener Tageblatt at the time of its foundation. Such is the regime of working conditions which is valid for the journalists of the capital and which has been extended to the rest of the country by regional agreements. Established at the same time by law and by an agreement which is among the best in existence, this regime guarantees a noteworthy status to Austrian journalists. The Belgian journalists, unlike their Austrian colleagues, possess neither model nor collective agreements. Generally speaking, they do not enjoy any kind of contract, a simple verbal 1 See p . 15 for a definition of editorial stenographers. — 61 — agreement more often than not constituting the basis of their employment. Moreover, since no legal provision is applicable t o working conditions, they can hardly be said to be governed by anything but custom. I n Brazil and Bulgaria also the journalists are usually engaged by simple verbal agreement. The rare written contracts are subordinated to the general legislation relating to the hiring of services, and there are no model or collective agreements in existence. As regards the status of journalists in Czechoslovakia, there are two different regimes in existence according t o the region. In Bohemia, it is the Austrian Act of 13 January 1910, relating t o commercial employees, which governs the drawing up of contracts in journalism. I n Slovakia and Ruthenia is found the Hungarian Press Act of 1914. The Minister of Social Welfare is at the present time drafting a Bill for the whole country, dealing especially with the working conditions of journalists. Another draft Bill relating to social insurance, and containing clauses specially applicable to journalists, will be submitted to Parliament in the near future. The model contract does not exist in Czechoslovak journalism. I t must, however, be observed t h a t , little by little, custom has brought it about t h a t individual contracts in respect of various periodicals are drawn up in almost the same way. I n general, they treat of the hours of work, salaries, holidays, weekly rest, sick leave, collaboration with other undertakings, and social insurance charges. There is no collective agreement covering the entire Press or even an important p a r t of it. I n 1919, the Press Syndicate drew u p a draft agreement which was accepted by only a few periodicals. Since then it has n o t ceased to work for the establishment of a general agreement, b u t its efforts have not been successful up t o the present. On the other hand, the Press using the German language possesses collective agreements of which one, t h a t concluded between the writers of the Prager Presse and the " O b i s ' ' Publishing Company, may serve as an example. I t was signed on 1 J a n u a r y 1927, and relates to salaries, hours of work, holidays, the cessation of services, etc. With the exception of t h e recent provisions concerning weekly rest, there is no legal regulation of the working conditions of journal- — 62 — ists in France. Individual contracts are the exception, and they are extremely variable in form and duration. Collective agreements are, a fortiori, unknown. In 1920 andin 1921 the Journalists' Association drew up a draft agreement, but the negotiations which were begun on this subject broke down owing to the resistance of the Paris Press Employers' Association. Only one attempt led to any result. At the time of the foundation of an important Paris paper, the editorial staff of the paper, in agreement with the management, asked the Journalists' Association for a model contract. This model contract, which was accepted by the management, served as a pattern for the individual contracts concluded with a certain number of writers, but it remained an isolated case, and went no further than the paper in question. The management of the paper having undergone radical changes in 1926, and its staff of writers having been almost entirely replaced, the contracts were abrogated, but they served as a basis for the legal proceedings brought by a number of writers who held that their rights had been infringed. The Journalists' Association was not discouraged ; it is continuing negotiations, and hopes for the establishment of a body of regulations governing the profession, in which it sees the surest foundation of cordial relations with the employers. One great difficulty arises from the lack of cohesion in the employers' organisation, which is far from being governed by strict discipline, and in reality binds none of its members. A certain success obtained in 1926 in the matter of salaries, however, justifies some hope of seeing French journalists one day endowed, like their colleagues in neighbouring large countries, with regulations which the development of modern journalism seems to render necessary. In Germany, before the conclusion of the National Press Agreement in 1926, the execution of which, as will be seen, was declared obligatory by the Federal Labour Administration, the relations between journalists and newspaper directors were subject — unless otherwise laid down by the regional collective agreements then existing — to the provisions of the Civil Code relating to the contract of service (Dienstvertrag) (section 616 et seq.). The only condition required was the absolute agreement of the parties in conformity with the principle of liberty guaranteed by the Federal Constitution. It is, however, appropriate to — 63 — remark t h a t according to section 624 of the Civil Code, the employee has the right a t the end of five years to denounce any contract envisaged for a longer period, even if the clauses of the contract stipulate otherwise. The system of collective agreements has been extensively used in Germany for many years. The first was concluded by the Union of the Labour Press more than twenty years ago with the newspapers of the Social-Democratic Party. This agreement covered about 170 newspapers and the clauses (which have remained in force in so far as they do not overlap with those of the national agreement, or do not contain provisions inferior to them) related to hours of work, minimum wages, holidays, sick leave, notice of termination of services, welfare, etc. This agreement was for a long time the only one of its kind. I t was not till after the war t h a t the system spread, and then in various regions of Germany a number of collective agreements were concluded, among which may be mentioned those which were signed in September 1921 by the professional associations of East Prussia, and in March 1923 by the associations of Central German}\ These agreements contained noteworthy clauses concerning points for which professional organisations in other countries still have to strive, and which are regarded by journalists as being of the utmost importance ; for example, notice of termination of services, special jurisdictions, and changes in the editorial opinions of the paper. At the end of 1925, shortly before the conclusion of the national agreement, there were a number of regional agreements in existence in Germany. In the National Association of the German Press alone five regional unions had established agreements governing rates of payment. In April 1922 the National Association of the German Press and the Newspaper Employers' Association endeavoured to unify working conditions in German journalism by the conclusion of a collective agreement which was declared obligatory by the Federal Labour Administration and which, without having the scope of the agreements of January 1926, may be regarded as a decisive step towards the preparation of the latter. At this time, too, was created the German Press Collaboration Commission x already mentioned, which considerably facilitated the understanding between the two parties and the preparation of subsequent agreements. 1 Cf. "Organisation of the Profession", p. 36. — 64 — This A'ast work of organising the German Press, and regulating terms of employment, found its fulfilment in a series of agreements concluded between the two national associations of publishers and journabsts in January 1926. The instruments at present in force concerning working conditions and welfare institutions are published by the German Press Collaboration Commission and form a volume of 117 pages. I t is eloquent testimony of the punctilious work which has conferred a status of the highest order on German journalists. Four kinds of texts may be distinguished among these documents, in addition t o the declaration prolonging the Collaboration Committee founded in 1922 : (1) An employment agreement (Arbeitsvertrag) which contains provisions concerning the position of the journalist with regard to the paper, the publisher, and the public, the conclusion of contracts of service (Dienstvertrag), the functions of the Collaboration Commission as regards the execution of the agreement system, disputes which may arise concerning the interpretation of the agreement, the obligation upon the two signatory organisations t o come to an understanding for the constitution of a welfare institution, and finally the scope of the national agreement and the status of district agreements. (2) A standard service agreement (Normaldienstvertrag) in which is included a model contract and which covers the nature of the employment, wages, weekly rest, annual holidays, procedure for annulment, compulsory insurance, changes in the editorial opinions of the paper, and the sale of the paper. (3) Regulations governing arbitration courts, or an arbitration agreement which is bound up with the existence of employment agreements and which lays down conditions for the institution of special tribunals in various large towns, and the procedure of the different courts. (4) A series of agreements relating t o welfare institutions, optional or obligatory, created by the two signatory organisations and provided for in the first two agreements. On 10 J u n e 1926 the Federal Labour Administration took a decision, in conformity with the Act of 23 J a n u a r y 1923, rendering the two labour and service agreements obligatory on all the members of the profession. An exception was made for the clauses concern- — 65 — ing welfare in t h a t they were not to apply to two or three large undertakings which already possessed satisfactory institutions, or to the members of the Union of the Labour Press which were in a similar position. The whole of the part concerning special jurisdictions is excluded from the declaration establishing the obligatory nature of the agreements, with the result t h a t members of the profession who do not belong to the signatory organisations have the option of appealing to the ordinary courts for the settlement of their disputes. The first two agreements, which form a single whole and whose clauses are mutually complementary, apply to the writers of the German daily papers. Among the writers are to be included the permanent outside contributors whose principal occupation is journalism and who are in the service of a single publishing house for the whole of their working time. They lay down only the general lines of the regulations governing work and state their fundamental principles, leaving the fixing of details, especially the level of wages, to district agreements which may exist side by side with the national agreement if they do not treat of matters already settled by it. The district agreements a t present in force, excluding those between the Union of the Labour Press and the newspapers of the Social Democratic P a r t y are : (1) An agreement concluded by the Press Association of North Western Germany which apphes to the towns of Hanover, Bremen, Wilhelmshafen, Göttingen, Lüneburg, and Osnabrück, among others. (2) An agreement concluded by the Bavarian Press Association applying to the towns of Munich, Nuremberg, and Augsburg, among others. (3) An agreement concluded by the Press Association of the Palatinate applying to the towns of Ludwigshafen, Landau, Spires, and Kaiserslautern, among others. (4) An agreement concluded by the Silesian Press Association applying to the towns of Breslau, Liegnitz, and Glatz, among others. I n the chapter concerning salaries will be seen those provisions of these district agreements which complete the national agreement. 5 — 66 — The agreement system of the German journalists is of the greatest importance. The National Press Association is of the opinion t h a t certain points are in need of improvement, especially with regard to salaries. The work bears the impress of a very pronounced spirit of collaboration and nowhere else perhaps is to be found evidence of such close contact between publishers and newspaper workers as there is in Germany. In Great Britain the contracts of employment of journalists are subject to the general provisions of the law concerning relations between employers and employees. There is no provision concerning their duration, but it is customary for contracts in respect of the F a r East and other distant countries to be concluded for an initial period of three to five years. For a certain number of years English journalists have benefited from a series of collective agreements, all concluded by the National Union of Journalists : First, in March 1920, an agreement was concluded with the Newspaper Society, regulating the salaries of the staff of the London offices of provincial newspapers. I n April 1920 a collective agreement was concluded with various Press agencies, fixing the rates of remuneration for news communicated by the correspondents of these agencies. I n August 1920 an agreement was concluded with the Newspaper Proprietors' Association, fixing the remuneration of correspondents for general home news. On 16 March 1921 a new collective agreement was concluded between the National Union of Journalists and the Newspaper Proprietors' Association. This was the most important of the series ; it regulated wages, hours of work, holidays, etc., of the permanent members of London editorial offices, including artists and photographers. On 22 March 1921 an agreement, amended in May 1924, was concluded with the Newspaper Society fixing the minimum salaries of members of the National Union of Journalists belonging to provincial newspapers. A new agreement was concluded in March 1922 with the Press agencies fixing the minimum salary and the hours of work of the staff of these agencies. Finally, on 26 July 1922 an agreement which regulated salaries, hours of work, and holidays, of photographic operators and printers was concluded with the Association of Press Photographic Agencies. — 67 — For its part, the Institute of Journalists, the other organisation of English journalists, has established a scale of salaries which it is endeavouring to get adopted by the employers. The agreement concluded in March 1921 between the National Union and the Newspaper Proprietors' Association constitutes the basis of the working conditions of English journalists, and it is this agreement which, in the absence of special mention, is referred to in the course of this survey. The use of written contracts is rather rare in Hungarian journalism. Certain responsible Press writers, however, possess contracts with a duration of from five to ten years. At the present time, there are neither model contracts nor collective agreements. I n 1917, the Independent Organisation of Journalists established a collective agreement approved by the Association of Publishers, and renewed in 1918 ; but after the fall of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat which had nationalised all newspapers, the publishers declared t h a t they considered their papers as new undertakings, and t h a t in their opinion the collective agreement was void. They no longer treated with their collaborators otherwise than on an individual basis. Since t h a t time no attempt has been made to establish a new collective agreement. In India, there is no regulation, by law or collective agreement, of working conditions in journalism. The only journalists in possession of an individual contract are generally those who have come from Great Britain and who have signed a contract of this kind before their departure. I n no country does legislation intervene to a greater extent in the journalistic profession than it has done in Italy since the coming of the Fascist regime. The law operates not only with regard to the conclusion and the enforcement of contracts of employment and certain living and working conditions such as welfare and weekly rest; it regulates t h e very exercise of the profession, which it makes a closed corporation submitted to a severe control. As a matter of fact, journalism does not receive exceptional treatment. I t shares this form of regulation with other intellectual professions, not excluding those of the chemist and the engineer, and it harmonises in this respect with the general Fascist conception of the organisation of professional Ufe within the State. — 68 — Under the terms of the Royal Decree of 20 February 1928, the profession of journalist may be practised only by the persons inscribed in the professional register. The maintenance of this register and the discipline of the persons inscribed therein are confided to a Committee of five members, themselves belonging to the Syndicate, and chosen by the Minister of Justice, in agreement with the Ministers of the Interior and Corporations, from among the journalists nominated by the competent professional association. An appeal may be made from any decision of this Committee relating to inscription or discipline to a Commission nominated by Royal Decree, on the proposal of the Minister of Justice in agreement with the Ministers of the Interior and Corporations. This Commission is composed of a president and ten members, of whom five are chosen from a list presented by the Directorate of the National Fascist Syndicate of Journalists. The professional register, which is established by the regional Fascist syndicates of journalists, contains three lists relating, respectively, to professional journalists, probationers, and publicists. The first are those who-have exclusively exercised the profession of journalist for a t least eighteen months, the second are those who have exercised their profession for less than eighteen months, or who have not yet reached the age of twenty-one ; the third are those who are engaged in other activities, or other professions, in addition to their journalistic activity. Under the terms of the Act of 31 December 1925, the responsibility for daily publications can be assumed only by professional journalists ; for other periodical publications, the responsible publisher may be a publicist. The Italian journalists have long been in possession of a collective agreement relating to employment. The first of all the Press organisations, the National Federation, obtained, as early as 1911, an agreement which remained unchanged, until 1919. Although it had not the force of law, as the present agreement has, its clauses were always recognised in legal proceedings. This agreement was revised and improved in December 1919, and again in October 1925. The adhesion of the Press Federation of the Confederation of Fascist Syndicates in December 1925 necessitated a new edition of the agreement in which nothing but the names of the contracting parties were changed. Finally, in 1927, a new agreement was signed, in substance almost identical with those which preceded it. One of the principal changes follows from the fact that, in conformity with the provisions enacted by the — 69 — Ministry of Corporations, the managing directors and managers of newspapers are excluded from the scope of the agreement. They are invited, on their side, to constitute an " Association of Managing Directors " and to conclude a special agreement with the publishers. The novelty of the present agreement resides in the sanction which it receives from the Trade Union Act of 3 April 1926, the methods of enforcement of which are defined by the Regulations of 1 July 1926. I t is public knowledge t h a t according to the principles of the Fascist regime, all citizens grouped in professional organisations are incorporated in the State. The economic interests of employers and employees are grounded not only in private law, but in public law, and more precisely in constitutional law. This situation is clearly defined in the Labour Charter promulgated on 21 April 1927. Among the tasks incumbent on professional associations recognised, in a sense, as wheels in the Fascist State machine, is the regulation of working conditions by means of the collective agreement. The Act of 3 April 1926, drafted in the spirit which a year later inspired the Labour Charter, established the conditions in which this task should be accomplished. Under the terms of section 5 of the Act, legally recognised associations represent all the members of the same professional category. With the employers, they draft the clauses of collective agreements which are obligatory on all persons belonging to the profession (section 10) ; employers and workers who do not observe the terms of the collective agreements are responsible to the signatory associations. The enforcement Regulations of 1 July 1926 specify t h a t collective agreements which are not established by legally recognised associations are null and void (section 47). All individual contracts must conform to the collective agreement of the profession unless their clauses are more favourable to the worker than those of the collective agreement (section 54). The duration of collective agreements is not specified ; it is left to the decision of the signatory organisations, b u t the agreement which has arrived a t its full term is automatically renewed for a period equal to t h a t of the preceding one unless one of the parties has denounced it two months previously (section 54). The law and its enforcement regulations prescribe in detail the manner in which the special tribunals x for dealing- with labour questions arising from the collective agreements should be instituted, 1 See "The Settlement of Disputes", p. 95. — 70 — and define the procedure of such tribunals. These special jurisdictions will be dealt with later on. The Labour Charter of 21 April 1927 specifies the various points which the Government intend to have included in collective agreements. I t declares : "Every collective agreement, under pain of nullity, must contain precise rules on internal discipline, periods of probation, the amount and methods of payment of salaries, and hours of work." I t also furnishes guiding principles relating to weekly rest, paid holidays, and indemnities in case of dismissal. Thus the agreements relating to Italian journalists are sanctioned by an Act which governs the relations between employers and employees generally, and applies to journalists equally with other workers. Although it is true that the journalists, owing to their strong organisation and their energetic activities, favoured by a spirit of comprehension on the part of Italian publishers, obtained a very complete agreement years ago, it is none the less true t h a t the subsequent legislative provisions have invested this agreement with additional force and prestige. I n any case, it is interesting to note t h a t in spite of the changes in the aspect of the former Press Federation, which has become a Fascist syndicate, the agreement established by the former has been maintained almost in its entirety by the latter, and it may be added t h a t it met the permanent needs of journalists to such an extent t h a t it was uniformly valid under different political regimes. The collective agreement of the Italian journalists, signed by a recognised association, and adopted by the entire hierarchy of the vast professional organisation of the Italian State, has thus force of law for all the members of the profession, whether they are members of the association or not. I t was signed on 15 November 1927 for the period ending 30 J u n e 1931, and as has been said, it differs very little from the preceding agreement to which additions have been made only here and there. The agreement applies to professional journalists who have made journalism their sole paid profession for at least eighteen months, and more precisely, to assistant editors, special editors, ordinary Press writers, news writers, correspondents, assistant correspondents, stenographers, reporters, regular outside contributors, and artists. Its clauses, which will be examined later, relate to the following questions : probation, nature of employment, multiple — 71 — collaboration, salaries, indemnities for dismissal, cases of conscience, changes in the editorial policy of the paper, welfare, and settlement of disputes (professional courts) (Collegi probivirali). Japanese journalists only know of individual contracts established in conformity with the general provisions of the Civil Code. relating to the hiring of services. In Latvia, since 1920 the journalists have been in possession of a collective agreement, the clauses of which deal with salaries, the general conditions of work, and the cessation of services. There are no statutory provisions concerning journalists. The establishment of the contract of employment of Luxemburg journalists falls within the scope of the Act of 31 October 1919, relating to the hiring of services of private employees. As is the case in numerous other countries, moreover, at least half the journalists do not possess even an individual written contract. The political directors, the editors and the political editors enjoy a contract of this kind, generally drawn up on the Unes of the contract for private employees, for all that concerns hours of work and conditions of annulment, and following the legal provisions relating to the remuneration of State employees as far as salaries are concerned. In Luxemburg, there is no model contract, nor collective agreement. At the time of the constitution of the Association of Luxemburg Journalists, there was some question of inscribing the preparation of a collective agreement in the programme of the new organisation, but this proposal was abandoned. The Syndicate of Journalists, created a little after the Association, revived the idea, and included among its demands the drafting of a collective agreement, or at least of a model contract. The Syndicate is learning from experiments made in other countries, especially in Germany and in Italy, and thus hopes to endow Luxemburg journalism with a sound status. In journalism in the Netherlands there is neither model contract nor collective agreement. The individual contracts of employment are subordinate to the provisions of the Civil Code concerning the hiring of services. Their duration varies greatly. There is a very marked tendency in Poland to regulate the conditions of work of ¡intellectual workers jby legislation. In - 72 — 1920, a Bill concerning the work of journalists was placed before the Diet. The examination of this Bill having been ¡postponed as a result of political events, the Union of Journalists' Associations requested the Government to promulgate the text in the form of a Decree. The Government, acceding to this wish, prepared a new text which, however, encountered such opposition from the publishers t h a t its promulgation had to be renounced. The Union of Journalists' Associations is endeavouring at the present time to get the Diet to pass the Bill. I n the absence of statutory regulations peculiar to journalists, there have recently come into force in Poland, two Legislative Decrees on intellectual workers, the scope of which includes members of the journalistic profession. One relates to social insurance the other t o the conclusion of contracts of employment. The latter, promulgated on 16 March 1928, deals with the conditions governing payment of salaries, cessation of services, indemnities in case of death, etc. Collective agreements are found in various parts of the country. The most important, concluded by the Journalists' Associations and the Warsaw publishing houses, has been in force since 1 June 1924, and it applies to all the papers of the capital. I t s principal clauses concern probation, salaries, holidays, and sick leave. Portuguese journalism is devoid of collective agreements ; even individual contracts are unknown. As there are no legal provisions which can be applicable to journalism, it is ruled only by customs which determine the verbal agreements governing the engagement of journalists. In Rumania also, there are no special legal provisions for the conclusion of contracts between directors and journalists. Moreover, the use of the contract itself is very rarely met with in the profession. There is no collective agreement in existence except in the minority Press of Transylvania. Apart from this, a few model contracts are found in this region, in use in the Press appearing in the German language. This local situation appears to be partly due to the former Hungarian Press Act, which regulates the relations between journalists and newspaper directors. The collective agreement concluded on 1 October 1925 by the Association of Minority Journalists of Transylvania and the newspaper undertakings, which is automatically renewable from year to year, deals with salaries, probation, cessation of services, arbitra- — 73 — tion, disputes, the moral obligations of journalists, changes in the editorial policy of the paper, sale of the paper, holidays, and taxes. I n addition, it contains an interesting clause which is found in no other collective agreement, and according to which the undertakings bind themselves to employ a number of professional journalists in proportion to the importance of the paper. I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, journalists have a legal status defined in detail. A Decree of the Minister of Social Welfare dated 25 September 1926, and issued in virtue of the Act on the Press, and which came immediately into force, governs the working conditions in journalism. The Decree considers as a journalist "any person employed in editorial offices in the quality of writer, reporter, or artist, or working there in a continuous manner and deriving therefrom the greater part of his income" (section 1). I t declares t h a t "every journalist must, at the latest one month after his arrival in an editorial office, conclude a contract with the manager of the paper stipulating : (1) the amount of monthly salary ; (2) the period of notice in case of dismissal ; (3) the duration of the annual holiday. The journalist who does not desire to conform to these provisions cannot invoke them in his favour, and the manager is not responsible for the consequences of his refusal. If, on the other hand, the manager refuses to establish a contract in spite of the request of a journalist, the competent authority of the Ministry of Labour shall apply the sanctions provided for in the law on the inspection of labour. The managers of newspapers are bound to notify these contracts to the competent authority of the Ministry of Labour" (section 2). The Decree then treats in detail of dismissal, holidays, and special jurisdictions, and ends with a certain number of sections on the constitution of an insurance fund for old age and invalidity. The Yugoslav Decree may be considered as one of the most important documents relating to the regulation of working conditions in journalism. Spanish journalists are not acquainted with either collective agreements or model contracts ; in most cases even individual contracts are unknown. The legislation does not contain any special provision in this connection. Nevertheless, without prescribing any measures — 74 — with regard to working conditions themselves, it has constituted organisations which may be destined to facilitate the regulation of journalistic work later. These organisations are the joint Press committees created by Royal Order in J a n u a r y 1927, in conformity with the Act of 26 November 1926, on the corporative organisation of the nation. The committees are instituted on a regional basis and are being organised at present. They are composed of representatives of publishers and journalists and intended to deal with labour questions (e.g. the interpretation of ordinary contracts, dismissals). The Professional Association of Madrid Journalists, desiring to take advantage of the possibilities offered by this schene, submitted to the joint committee of its region a certain number of proposals which might serve for the drafting of a collective agreement ; the Association sees in this action the first step towards measures capable of rescuing Spanish journalism from the precarious situation in which it finds itself. I t may not be inappropriate at this point to draw attention to an initiative which has of late deeply stirred Spanish journalists in various parts of the coun ry. The National Advisory Assembly has been supplied with a draft statute of the Press which applies quite new principles to the working conditions of journalists. The draft provides for the compulsory conclusion of contracts of employment in which questions of salaries, holidays, hours of work, and dismissal, would be treated. I t also makes provision for the creation of insurance funds which would be very advantageous to the journalists \ sanatoria, and orphanages, as well as the constitution of building co-operative societies. I n each undertaking a staff committee would be formed, composed of the manager and three Press writers who would deal with certain internal professional questions. In spite of the enormous progress which such a statute would bring about in the working conditions of Spanish journalists, they have not shown much enthusiasm for the proposal. The reason for this attitude may be t h a t the Government's draft provides for the maintenance of the censorship, the abolition of which is energetically demanded by the Press, and it is thought t h a t the economic advantages offered to the journalists are a means of inducing them to accept its maintenance. This explains why the Liberal papers and even certain organs of the Right have explicitly declared against the proposal. The sixth committee of the National Assembly, known as the 1 See "Welfare Institutions", p. 196. — 75 — Committee on Political Laws, was entrusted with the examination of the draft. I t was not able to come to any definite conclusion, and decided, in view of the various currents of opinion stirred by this delicate question, to proceed with a kind of consultation among the circles concerned by means of a questionnaire which it published in the newspapers in December 1927. The answers were to have been sent, before 10 January 1928, t o the Secretariat of the Assembly. The result of this enquiry is not yet known, but it is certain (to keep to the subject which is being dealt with here, t h a t is to say, the working conditions of journalists) that the draft statute would enable Spanish journalism to realise considerable progress. The contracts of employment of Swedish journalists are subject to the provisions of the general legislation relating to the hiring of services. There are no collective agreements in Sweden. On the other hand, the Association of Newspaper Publishers and the Association of Journalists have established a model contract, the use of which they recommend to their members. The principal clauses of this contract concern hours of work, minimum salaries, sick leave, indemnity in case of death, holidays, and weekly rest. No statutory provisions are to be found in Switzerland specially applicable t o the working conditions of journalists, b u t the Swiss Press Association has concluded a series of agreements with the Newspaper Publishers' Association settling various questions of employment. The earliest of these agreements now in force, signed in 1919, concerns the remuneration of Press writers. Another agreement of the same year minutely regulates the remuneration and the general situation of independent journalists (regular external collaborators). I n 1923, a new agreement was signed, dealing with the conditions of work of journalists, hours of work, holidays, etc. The latest agreement, also drawn u p in 1923, determines the charges incumbent on the employer in respect of the insurance of his personnel. Thus, the Swiss Press Association has obtained successive agreements which, little by little, have covered a good part of the living and working conditions of journalists. I n consequence of the absence of large journalistic organisations, collective agreements are unknown in the United States, as far as — 76 — the Press is concerned. Apart from special cases, there are hardly any contracts of employment between managers and journalists. On most occasions questions of employment are settled by simple verbal agreement. In the rare cases in which an individual contract exists, it is the ordinary law which determines its terms. Ill T E R M I N A T I O N OF S E R V I C E S A N D S E T T L E M E N T OF D I S P U T E S TERMINATION OF SERVICES The termination of services is one of the crucial questions affecting the situation of journalists. Together with the salaries question, it receives their constant attention, and it is not without reason t h a t the first act of the International Federation of Journalists was to inscribe it in its programme as one of the questions which most urgently called for settlement. Among t h e disadvantages of the profession, t h a t which journalists perhaps fear most is insecurity. At the root of this insecurity is the ever-present possibility of dismissal. The vicissitudes which the development of a newspaper may undergo are well known. If to the surprises which the course of political events may bring are added the ups and downs of fashion, and the caprices of advertising, and then t o all the outside circumstances which may lead to reduced circulation or to the extinction of a paper are added the internal events — transformation, reorganisation, disagreements, which may affect a part of the personnel — one arrives at a disquieting number of circumstances in which a journalist risks the loss of his employment, and may be obliged, often in unfavourable conditions owing to his age or to his specialised qualifications, to seek work elsewhere. Among these cases there is a particularly hard one which is bound up with the very nature of journalistic work : it is t h a t in which a newspaper, in consequence of changes in its editorial policy and general outlook — changes which may arise either from the transfer of the paper by sale or from the influence of a political movement on its administration — might require its staff to express opinions different from those which they were previously called upon to profess. These changes of policy, more or less frequent according to the country and t o the state of development of the Press, necessarily create conscientious dim- — 78 — culties for the journalist. He is often required to do work of a very personal character and to make use of his own political, religious, and moral opinions in his activities ; there are thus, in journalism, relations between the individual and his calling, between the personality of the man and his professional work, of such a nature t h a t the character of his writings cannot be modified without a certain violence to the private conscience of the writer. Naturally, a man who holds t o his principles will not wish to make any distinction between his opinions and those of the paper for which he is working, and will consider any suggestion of supporting ideas not in agreement with his own as contrary to conscience and honour. This is, perhaps, a harsh illustration of the difficulties with which a journalist may be confronted for reasons of conscience. There are others, more delicate and more complex, which create embarrassments just as serious. I t may happen, for example, t h a t a journalist is not required to modify his way of thinking, t h a t he is even left full liberty of expression, and t h a t his articles are printed in full, but at the same time the general attitude of the paper is altered in such a way t h a t the journalist feels himself compromised. He is not compelled to take any action contrary to his principles, but he feels t h a t his reputation is none the less in question. I t may also happen that, without any change in the general attitude of the paper, a director will ask the journalist to do him some service contrary to morality ; for example, to take p a r t in a compaign of blackmail or simply to help with his pen to pursue some private vendetta. These cases are not purely theoretical. They are met with frequently enough to constitute an urgent problem in the eyes of journalists, and they interest a large number of the members of the profession. In fact it is not only writers having to treat of political, religious, and moral questions who may find themselves confronted with such difficulties, as one might be tempted to think ; cases of conscience may arise with more or less acuity in several domains — in art criticism, theatrical criticism, sport, etc. In papers championing definite opinions, where every journalist carries on a kind of warfare, it may very well happen t h a t even those members of the staff who are not directly concerned with the preparation of articles expressing ideas, but only perform — 79 — tasks of a neutral character, such as the sub-editing of telegraphic reports, or reports of traffic accidents, are faced with a question of conscience in the event of a change in the editorial policy of the paper. Even if the nature of their work does not undergo any alteration, they might find themselves in some degree in the situation of men who, without having to take their place in the firing line, are obliged to work in the supply or medical services of an enemy army and thus indirectly help to fight its battles. A man of honour could not accept such a situation and would be obliged, in spite of himself, to withdraw his services from the undertaking. What happens in such a case ? As it is the employee who has denounced the contract and not the employer, the latter has no obligations with regard to the former, who, according t o the usual legislation concerning hiring of services, is even obliged to give him a certain amount of notice, during which period he must continue his work. This situation appears profoundly unjust to journalists, who cannot admit t h a t they should support the consequences of a profound change in their conditions of employment, and t h a t they should be deprived of compensations which might normally accompany dismissal, merely because their departure has the appearance of a voluntary resignation. To protect themselves as much against the risks of sudden dismissal as against the particularly distasteful circumstances surrounding cessation of services for reasons of conscience, journalists have endeavoured to hedge the annulment of the contract with certain conditions which soften its effect. They have obtained these conditions here and there, either by custom which has gradually become general, or by the provisions of collective agreements, or even by law. They consist in the establishment of the longest possible term of notice of dismissal and in the grant of indemnities. The conditions of the termination of services in various countries will now be examined. I t is well to observe at the outset the distinction between the notice of dismissal, on the one hand, which entails the payment of salary during the period of notice and which is intended to enable the person concerned t o seek another post, and, on the other hand, the indemnity, which is a compensation for the material and moral damage suffered by the employee and the recognition of services rendered t o the paper. I t will be seen below to what extent one of these conditions, if not both together, has been established in different countries. — 80 — The Australian collective agreement, so detailed and so complete in other respects, does not contain any clause concerning the termination of services. The dismissal of journalists is subject to the general legislation. In Austria the Act of 11 February 1920 relating to journalists requires t h a t the written contract with which every writer is furnished when he takes up his post shall contain, among other things, express mention of the notice of dismissal, which must coincide with the end of a quarter, and must not be less than three months (six months in the case of the closing down of the undertaking). After five years' service the notice is increased by one month for each year of employment, up to a maximum of twelve months. Under the terms of the collective agreement of the Viennese Press, in case of annulment, the collaborator who has worked for the paper for three years (permanent writer, permanent foreign correspondent, or regular outside collaborator) must receive, in addition to his pay for the duration of the notice, an indemnity equal to twice the emoluments of his last month of service. After five years' service the indemnity is equal to thrice the emoluments of the last month, and after eight years the amount is increased by one month's pay for each year's service, up to a maximum of eighteen months. When an agreement more favourable than the provisions of t h e Act of 1920 is concluded between the parties, the collaborator renounces the sums due to him on account of the extended notice provided for by the law, and declares himself satisfied with the three months' pay for the period of notice, increased by the indemnities specified in the agreement (sections 19 and 22). If the editorial policy of the paper is changed, the collaborator "who is unable to continue his services without doing violence to his opinions is entitled to annul his contract, without notice, within a month from taking note of the change. The collaborator in question is in this case entitled, in addition to the three months' pay for the period of notice provided for in the Act of 1920, to an indemnity which up to five years' service is equal to an entire year's salary. Every new period of five years entitles him to a supplement amounting to six months' salary. A period which has merely been begun counts as five years. Regular outside collaborators are not entitled to this indemnity unless they have belonged to the paper for at least one year, — 81 — If disputes arise, the task of deciding whether the conditions for annulment on the grounds of changes in the policy of the paper exist is confided t o an arbitration committee composed of two arbitrators nominated by one of the parties, two nominated by the other, and a president who is a member of the National Council and chosen by the first four arbitrators. I n the event of the arbitrators failing to agree on the choice of a president, he is appointed by the President of the National Council. If the committee is of the opinion t h a t the declarations of the journalist relative to changes of policy are tainted with bad faith, it may inflict a fine on him not exceeding 10,000 crowns (section 25). If a newspaper is sold, the purchaser may denounce any contract within a period of one month after the sale. The indemnities due are the same as those for changes in policy. An arbitration committee may also grant these indemnities to a collaborator who, for personal reasons, does not desire to be bound by contract to the new publisher. Finally, in the case of the closing down of a journalistic undertaking, the employee is entitled t o a lump sum equal to six months' pay, unless the length of his services entitles him to the larger indemnities provided for in section 19 quoted above. Mention may also be made of a clause of the Austrian agreement to the effect t h a t any provision in an individual contract which restricts the liberty of work of a journalist after the termination of his contract or after he has reached the retiring age is null and void (section 19). In Bulgaria journalists' contracts are subject to the general legislation concerning obligations. In Czechoslovakia, under the terms of the Austrian Act of 13 J u n e 1910 relating to private employees, which is still in force in Bohemia, notice of annulment of a contract is of six weeks. I n no case may it be less than a month. However, t h e custom has become established in journalism of granting three months' notice, b u t for certain posts this is sometimes prolonged to a year. Custom has thus rectified the insufficiency of the legal provisions, and has created in Bohemia a situation identical with t h a t which Slovakia owes to the Hungarian Act of 28 March 1914. I n fact, under the terms of sections 57, 58, and 59 of this Act, notice of annulment of a journalistic contract is, as already stated, of one year for the 6 — 82 — responsible editor, six months for the assistant editor and any other member of, the editorial staff of more than five years' standing, and three months in all other cases. The collective agreement of the Prager Presse adopts the legal provisions as far as notice of dismissal is concerned. It adds the principle of compensation to these provisions, and indicates amounts which vary from one month's pay after five years' service to six months' pay after fifteen years. Furthermore, it lays down that the employer must allow the dismissed journalist time to seek new employment, provided that this time does not exceed three weeks in all 1 . In France, where, as has already been said, there is no legal provision specially concerning the journalist's contract, it is the general legislation on the hiring of services which determines questions of dismissal in the Press. However, customs, which the courts take into account, have established themselves ; a proof of this is furnished by a judgment delivered in May 1927. A journalist, having been informed that the paper on which he was working would cease to appear in three months' time, claimed an indemnity calculated at the rate of one month's pay for each year of service, an indemnity which he declared to be in conformity with custom. The newspaper, on the other hand, declared that the three months' notice which he had been given was also customary and dispensed it from giving any indemnity. The court declared that "in default of custom, it appears from the precedents that the courts enjoy in this matter a sovereign power of assessment for the purpose of deciding whether or not there are reasons to award damages or simply the amount of salary in respect of the months covered by the notice", and decided that the paper should pay the journalist an indemnity which was higher than the salary for the three months covered by the notice, without, however, amounting to as much as the sum claimed by the plaintiff. The Journalists' Association, which had been dealing with the case, is of the opinion that this judgment has given satisfaction to 1 The collective agreement of the Prager Presse, which provides in case of simple annulment for a notice of three to six months and compensation ranging from one month's pay after five years' service to six months' pay after fifteen years, declares t h a t if the editorial policy of a paper is changed the journalist resigning for reasons of conscience shall receive half his annual salary. If he has not found a post a t the end of six months he shall receive another indemnity of the same amount. After five years' service he is entitled to a third indemnity, after ten years to a fourth, and so on for every period of five years' service. — 83 — the employees' thesis, according to which, as far as the Press is concerned, the notice does not suffice, and must be backed by an indemnity in proportion to the services rendered by the journalist 1 . The Association also endeavours, in the absence of fixed rules, legal or contractual, to settle individual cases by arbitration. Arbitral proceedings of this kind in June 1927 fixed at two months' salary the amount due to a journalist whom certain errors of procedure had prevented from taking advantage of the three months' notice given by his paper 2. In Germany the rules which govern the annulment of a journalist's contract are founded partly on the Civil Code and partly on the collective agreement in force since January 1926. The duration of contracts varies greatly. The collective agreement does not contain any clause dealing with this point. It must, however, be observed that, according to section 624 of the Civil Code, the employee has the right to denounce his contract at the end of five years, even if it is laid down otherwise in the contract itself. With regard to notice of dismissal, section 622 of the Civil Code provides that any contract, binding a person employed on work of a certain level and devoting the greater part of his time to such work, cannot be denounced except at the end of a quarter, and subject to six weeks' notice. These provisions were adopted in the collective agreement, where they appear as the conditions applicable to the dismissal of a journalist employed for less than three years. For persons with more than three years' service, the agreement provides conditions more advantageous than those of the law, viz. that the notice of dismissal shall be three months ; at the end of ten years' service notice is increased to six months. The agreement adds, in an important clause, that in calculating years of service, every period of three years spent in another undertaking shall be considered as equivalent to at least one year in the new firm. Changes in the editorial policy are provided for in the collective agreement, which first of all requires (contract of normal service, Article 2) that every individual contract of employment shall contain, among other things, a declaration of the editorial 1 Bulletin du Syndicat des journalistes, No. 42, J a n . 1928, p . 6. » Ibid. — 84 — policy of the undertaking or of the tendencies of the paper, and then prescribes (Article 15) t h a t every journalist has the right, within a month from the day on which he learns of the changes in policy, or from the day on which, in view of events, he ought to have perceived such changes, to terminate his services. Nevertheless, he continues to receive his salary until the expiration of the normal notice of dismissal. If the writer has accomplished five years' uninterrupted service in the undertaking, he is entitled, in addition, to a sum equal to six months' salary, and if he has spent more than ten years in the same undertaking, to one year's salary \ If the paper is sold, and the new proprietor does not wish to take over the old contracts, the writers receiving their dismissal leave their posts immediately. They are entitled to the payment of their salary until the expiry of the normal notice of dismissal, or until the expiry of their contract. I n Great Britain, the contracts of employment of journalists are subject to the general provisions of the legislation, which require t h a t reasonable notice shall be given in case of annulment. The usual notice is of three, six, or twelve months, according to the importance of the post. I n Hungary, according to the terms of sections 57, 58, and 59 of the Press Act of 28 March 1914, the notice for the denunciation of a contract concluded between the publisher of a periodical and a member of the editorial staff is of one year for the responsible editor, six months for the assistant editor and any member of the staff of more than five years' standing. I n other cases the notice is of three months. Certain serious circumstances, enumerated in the Act, alone allow of immediate denunciation. Without expressly mentioning changes in the editorial policy of the paper, section 58 of the Act implicitly admits resignation for reasons of conscience. I t declares t h a t : " a member of the editorial staff may denounce the contract without notice . . . if the publisher requires t h a t member to write an article whose contents are tantamount to a punishable action or whose tendency is contrary to the stipulations of the contract of employment . . . 1 I t must be added t h a t a publisher has the right to dismiss without notice any journalist who acts in a manner contrary to the recognised editorial policy of the paper. The right of a journalist dismissed in this way to formulate a claim for damages rests intact. — 85 — the employee is entitled to demand his full salary for the entire period of the notice of denunciation". Italian journalists have obtained detailed regulation of the question of termination of services. The collective agreement, revised in 1927, lays down t h a t the breach of a contract not provoked by a culpable act on the part of the journalist gives rise to the following indemnities : 1. One year's pay to directors and assistant directors ; 2. Nine months' pay to editors and the titular Rome correspondents ; 3. Six months' pay to ordinary journalists, foreign correspondents, stenographers, reporters, regular outside contributors, and artists. I n addition to the fixed indemnities, all the preceding categories receive an amount equal to one month's pay for every year or fraction of a year of service (Article 16). The contract may even be denounced at the request of the journalist if he has reached the age of sixty years or has accomplished thirty-five years of professional activity. Retiring allowances are then due to him. If the editorial policy of the paper should be changed, the collaborators who have to deal with political questions in the paper are entitled to break their contract. The same right is granted to all collaborators who are placed for any reason whatsoever in an unfavourable situation incompatible with their professional dignity ; the indemnity for dismissal must be paid to them. I n the case of fundamental changes in the policy of the paper, the following have the right to break their contracts : the editor, the heads of departments, the managing director, the sub-editor, the nominal head of the Rome correspondence office, and, generally speaking, all journalists who have political functions or responsibilities. I n Japan, apart from the general provisions of the Civil Code relating to the hiring of services, there are no rules concerning the annulment of contracts, other t h a n those required by the varying customs of the various undertakings. I n Latvia it is the rule in the profession to give three months' notice of dismissal. — 86 — In Luxemburg, under the terms of the Act of 31 October 1919, relating to the hiring of services of private employees, apart from cases in which serious reasons permit immediate denunciation with compensation for damages, the annulment of a contract can only take place subject to notice of two, four or six months according, to whether the employee has worked for less than five years, for more than five and less than ten years, or more than ten years. No recent case of changes in the editorial policy of a paper is known in Luxemburg. Thus, in the absence of any legal or contractual provision envisaging this particular case, it is difficult to say what form the settlement of a dispute due to reasons of conscience would take. The Luxemburg journalists are of the opinion that, in spite of the rarity of such cases in their country, it would not be futile to make provisions in a collective contract for the possibility of their occurrence, and, similarly, that it would not be inappropriate to obtain, at least by contractual means, longer notice of dismissal than the periods provided for in the Act relating to private employees. In the Netherlands individual contracts of employment are subordinate to the general provisions of the Civil Code relating to the hiring of services. Notice of denunciation is usually from three to four months. In Poland also it is the general principles of civil law which govern the drafting of journalists' contracts, with the exception of certain questions which, as has already been explained, are treated in regional collective contracts, the most important of which is that in force in Warsaw. Notice of dismissal is generally of three months, unless serious reasons justify immediate denunciation. In Portugal the cancellation of journalists' contracts is subject only to the legal provisions concerning the hiring of services. If the editorial policy of a paper is changed, no indemnity is due to a journalist resigning for reasons of conscience. In Rumania the established customs of journalism generally require that the notice of denunciation of a contract shall be three — 87 — months. The collective agreement of the minority Press of Transylvania requires the following periods of notice : 1. For a responsible sub-editor, at least one year ; 2. For ordinary journalists of three years' standing, at least nine months ; 3. For ordinary journalists, six months ; 4. For beginners, at least three months. Under the terms of the collective agreement, any journalist who is dismissed may demand to know the reasons for dismissal. If they are not furnished to him within one week, the denunciation of the contract is considered null and void. When a newspaper requires the preparation of an article contrary to the tendencies specified in the contract, or when the editorial policy of a paper is changed in an obvious manner, the journalist may immediately withdraw his services while keeping his rights to the salary due for the period of notice. An arbitral committee settles doubtful cases. The committee may also compel the publisher to whom presents or other favours may have been given for the purpose of obtaining tendentious articles, or the silence of the paper, to accept the resignation of the collaborator who has suffered moral damage, and pay him the statutory indemnities. If the newspaper is sold and the purchaser refuses to take over the existing contracts, the former owner must pay the collaborators leaving their posts the indemnities provided for in case of changes in the policy of the paper. The Decree of 1926 which governs the status of journalists in the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom declares that the written contract with which every journalist is furnished on his entry into employment must mention the notice for the denunciation of the contract. This notice may not be less than three months. Every journalist who has accomplished more than ten years' service in the same editorial offices is entitled, in addition to the three months' notice, to an indemnity of one month's pay for every year's service after the tenth (section 4 and 5). If the newspaper ceases to appear the publisher must pay the journalist the salary due for the legal period of notice. In the event of the bankruptcy of the paper, the claims of the journahsts have priority over all others (section 7). — 88 — A journalist may cease work without notice and without losing his right to the indemnity if the publisher compels him to perform a task contrary to his personal or professional honour (section 11). It seems that the case of changes in the policy of a paper could be brought within the scope of this clause. In Spain, apart from the general provisions of the Civil Code and of the labour legislation, there are no rules but those in use in each undertaking. Generally, one month's notice is given, but this custom is not at all rigorously observed, and the same may be said of the substitution of this short notice, when it is suppressed, by a month's salary. Changes in the policy of a paper have only rarely occurred up to the present, and the journalists have not raised the problem publicly. If a journalist is led to resign for reasons of conscience, he does not receive any kind of indemnity. In Sweden, custom, consecrated by the model contract recommended by Press associations, and by jurisprudence, fixes notice of dismissal at three months. Changes in policy are not envisaged in the model contract, and there is no recent legal decision on the subject. Nevertheless, it is held in Swedish journalistic circles that a collaborator resigning for reasons of conscience would receive three months' pay as compensation. The agreement of 1923, which determines the conditions of employment of Swiss journalists, declares that the parties concerned must come to an understanding with regard to the length of notice of denunciation, but adds that it must not be less than three months (paragraph 5). Furthermore, the agreement of 1919 concerning independent journalists (outside contributors), who receive very special attention in the Swiss Press, declares that the unjustified and purely arbitrary replacement of an independent journalist warrants a request for an indemnity which may amount to the sum of the fees paid during the preceding year (paragraph 1, Article 2). In the United States, it is the general civil law which settles questions of annulment of journalists' contracts. — 89 — In the U.S.S.S., it is the Labour Code, sections 46, 47, 48, 88, 89, and 90, which govern the conditions concerning the annulment of contracts of workmen and employees. The notice of dismissal provided for in respect of all workers is of two weeks. Finally, in Uruguay, case of dismissal. journalists receive no compensation in Such is the state of the question in a number of countries. If, in the numerous countries in which no legal or contractual regulation exists, the solution of the various individual cases is left to friendly arrangements, which vary according to circumstances, or to the decision of the courts, which are founded on the general provisions of the Code concerning hiring of services and on the rather vague customs established in the profession, it will be observed that, in the countries in which journalists have obtained collective regulation of their working conditions, they have taken care to devote detailed provisions in their agreements to this question, which they have very much at heart ; in fact practically all the agreements deal with the problem. There is one principle which is universally established in agreements and which, moreover, is consecrated by the general legislation concerning the hiring of services, and t h a t is the principle t h a t notice shall be given by the party which desires to annul the contract. The collective agreements are careful to provide t h a t this notice shall be fairly long, and usually require t h a t it shall be proportional to the length of service. Notice may relate to a period of work actually done or may be represented by a sum of money equal to the salary due for this period. A second principle consecrated by several agreements is t h a t of compensation intended, not t o replace notice, but t o be added to it. The compensation is held to represent t h a t part of the prosperity of the undertaking which can be attributed to the activity of the journalist in question, and aims at counteracting the damage caused to him by dismissal. Agreements which provide for compensation also require it t o be proportional to the length of service. The particular case of termination of services constituted by resignation for reasons of conscience is also the subject of detailed provisions in the collective agreements. Sometimes the signatories are content to assimilate this resignation to a dismissal, and to — 90 — guarantee to the journalist compelled to resign for reasons of conscience the usual notice and indemnity. But on other occasions the signatories attach importance to ensuring to the resigning journalist conditions more favourable than those for a dismissed journalist ; and, holding that he suffers more serious damage than the latter, they grant him a larger indemnity. While the national organisations of journalists have. been dealing with this important question of the termination of services, the International Federation of Journalists also has paid it very special attention. At its first Congress in September 1926 it included the question on its initial agenda, side by side with the question of special jurisdictions. Two months later it sent a long note to the affiliated organisations with a view to a common campaign on this subject, and it followed up the note with a statement of the proposals accepted by the executive committee of the Federation and intended to serve as a guide in the negotiations to be undertaken. In this statement the Federation insisted on the necessity of the conscience guarantee. It declared that : "the conscience guarantee should be represented in case of voluntary departure based on reasonable and sincere scruples of conscience by an indemnity superior to the ordinary indemnity for dismissal". The same principle was incorporated in the draft collective agreement which the International Federation of Journalists established towards the end of 1927. Finally, a new proof of the importance for journalists of the question of the termination of services, and particularly of resignation for reasons of conscience, is found in the fact that when the Advisory Committee of Intellectual Workers, created in connection with the International Labour Office, examined the urgent problems which should be included in its first agenda, it thought that it could not do better than choose, with a few other questions concerning various categories of intellectual workers, that of the conscience clause in journalism. THE SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES Journalists very soon acquired the sentiment that their profession presents rather peculiar features, and that disputes which may arise on the subject of their working conditions are of such a special and delicate nature that recourse to the ordinary courts would not be without inconvenience. 'The rights and interests of journalists cannot be effectively guaranteed either by the ordinary — 91 — civil courts or by professional courts (tribunaux prud'hommaux) constituted for other corporations" 1 , declares the executive committee of the International Federation of Journalists. " I t is in our best interests to be summoned before judges who know our profession and who belong to i t 2 ". These principles, recognised in 1910 by an International Press Congress held at Trieste, offered substantial advantages in the eyes of journalists, whatever the condition of their status. If their working conditions are regulated neither by law nor by collective agreements, and only conform to usages, they are of the opinion that members of the profession would know better than anyone else how to interpret these usages and to settle disputes in conformity with the conditions which are peculiar to journalism. It is for this reason, even in countries in which no precise regulation of journalistic activity exists, that newspaper workers demand the institution of a special professional jurisdiction, in the place of professional courts for commercial or Government employees, before which they are usually summoned and which they regard as not competent to deal with journalistic cases. The very absence of a precise regulation of their working conditions and the fact that, in case of dispute, a delicate appreciation of custom must be undertaken, seem to them to justify so much the more the appointment of judges thoroughly acquainted with the calling. When the working conditions of journalists are governed by law or by collective agreements, the advantage of special jurisdictions in the opinion of those in the profession, is evident, moreover, and they have accordingly confirmed the principle of such jurisdictions when drafting and negotiating agreements, as will be seen later. They hold that only persons in the profession itself are capable of giving a precise interpretation of the clauses of a contract, when the dispute involves complex considerations. Even when this interpretation does not raise difficulties, and when the cases to be settled are particularly simple, the system of special jurisdictions offers such advantages from the point of view of speedy operation that it is to be preferred above all others. Below will be found a summary showing the ways in which the settlement of disputes which may arise between journalists and their employers is effected in different countries. 1 Proposals accepted by t h e executive committee as conclusions t o t h e Report on the Plan of Work of the International Federation of Journalists, 1926, p . 2. 2 Note addressed t o national organisations, Oct. 1926, p . 7. — 92 — In Australia the collective agreements obtained by the journalists provide for two kinds of institutions. One kind, known as advisory committees, and whose task is to examine disputes arising between publishers and journalists with regard to questions which are not dealt with in the contracts, or relative to the interpretation of contracts, have only a limited power. Their decisions, regarded as simple opinions, have no executive force. The other kind of institution is represented by the Federal Council, which is entrusted with the prevention and settlement of disputes. The advisory committees are constituted on a joint basis in each State of the Commonwealth. The Federal Council, also constituted on a joint basis, meets in the places determined upon by the two parties. It has full powers to judge disputes which may arise respecting the interpretation of collective agreements, and even disputes arising between the journalists' association and newspaper owners concerning subjects not dealt with in the collective contract. The settlement of labour disputes in Austrian journalism may be arrived at in two ways. When the dispute arises from the application of the collective agreement, it is brought before an arbitral committee constituted in conformity with Article 30 of the agreement. It is composed of four arbitrators, of whom two are chosen by the newspaper concerned, and two by the Organisation of the Viennese Press, and a president elected by the four arbitrators. The decisions of the Commission are without appeal. When the dispute arises out of questions which do not directly concern the application of the agreement, it may, if the plaintiff does not prefer the arbitration procedure, be brought before the competent ordinary court, that is to say, in the case in point, before the professional court composed of an ordinary judge assisted by a representative of the journalists and by a representative of the publishers. The parties may appeal from these courts to a national court composed in the same way. Disputes which may arise in Belgium in regard to labour questions are submitted to the jurisdiction of professional courts (tribunaux prud'hommaux) as far as salaries below 6,000 francs are concerned, and to the commercial courts in the case of salaries above this amount. — 93 — In Brazil labour disputes which, as a matter of fact, the Press associations endeavour to settle by friendly intervention, are within the competence of the ordinary civil courts. In Bulgaria also, such disputes, which are fairly rare, are settled by the ordinary courts, in virtue of the general legislation on obligations, or simply by the friendly intervention of the Society of Journalists. Disputes which may arise in Czechoslovakia are within the competence of the ordinary courts. The journalists' organisations intervene whenever they can, to secure a friendly settlement of disputes. The collective agreement of the German Press instituted an arbitration court. The collective agreement of t h e Prager Presse also provides for an arbitration court composed of a representative of the German Press Association, a representative of the Czechoslovak Syndicate, and two representatives of the employers. These four members elect a fifth to act as president. Disputes arising in France between directors and journalists are normally settled by legal proceedings before the civil or the commercial courts. The Association of Journalists, for its- part, intervenes as much as possible in these disputes ; in each important case it suggests the arbitral system before recourse to courts, and directors accept this speedy and equitable method more and more frequently. A recent case of arbitration of this kind has already been described 1 . This practice, which tends to become commoner, remains, however, a simple usage which is consecrated in no formal agreement, but the Association of Journalists attaches importance to including the question of special jurisdictions in the collective contract which it desires to discuss with directors. I t has been shown t h a t in Germany the decision of June 1926 of the National Labour Administration, which rendered obligatory on the whole country the clauses of the agreements concluded between the Press associations in January of the same year, excluded from the declaration establishing compulsion the provisions concerning arbitration institutions. Journalists who do not belong to the contracting organisations are therefore not 1 Cf. "Termination of Services", p . 82. — 94 — obliged to apply to the special courts established by these organisations, and may have recourse to the ordinary courts. The exclusion of the arbitration clauses from the declaration establishing compulsion also leaves in existence the arbitration organs created by other associations. Such is the case with the Union of the Labour Press, which organised more than twenty years ago an optional arbitration court which is still in existence. The arbitration institution created by the Newspaper Industry Employers' Association and the National Association of the German Press is based on Articles IV and VI of the agreement on employment, on Article 17 of the agreement on normal service of January 1926, which lays down the general principles, and on the rules relating to arbitration courts, which form the subject of a special agreement, also of January 1926. The institution consists of fourteen regional courts constituted in the principal towns of the country, and a high court whose seat is at Berlin, all of which are organised in the spirit of Part X of the Code of Civil Procedure, and deliver judgment independently of the ordinary judicial channels. The regional courts are composed of four judges — each of the contracting associations appointing two — and a president appointed for two years by the regional Commission of Collaboration 1, or by a similar organisation on which the two contracting parties are represented. The high court is composed of six judges — each of the contracting associations appointing three — and a president appointed for two years by the National Commission of Collaboration 1. The regulations established by the two associations describe in great detail the procedure to be followed by cases submitted to the regional courts, which function as lower courts, and to the high court, which sits as a court of appeal. All disputes relating to conditions of service which may arise between the publishers, on the one side, and the editorial staffs and permanent collaborators, on the other, are submitted, to the exclusion of the ordinary channels, to the special courts thus instituted. In addition to the ordinary courts to which, in Great Britain, disputes arising on the subject of the execution of contracts are 1 p. 36. For the Commissions of Collaboration, cf. "Organisation of the Profession", — 95 — submitted, the collective agreements provide for the creation of special organs charged with the settlement of disputes. For instance the agreement respecting rates of payment, concluded in March 1921 between the Newspaper Society and the National Union of Journalists, established a joint committee composed of five representatives of each of the contracting parties, to decide all cases that previous negotiations between the parties concerned have not been able to settle. In Hungary, the collective agreement of 1919, which was annulled when the Dictatorship of the Proletariat fell, contained a clause instituting a joint arbitral committee. At the present time disputes which arise concerning working conditions are submitted to the ordinary professional courts. A very few individual written contracts provide for arbitration procedure in case of dispute. Italian journalists long ago obtained the special courts which the members of the profession in many countries desire. The collective agreement established by the former Federation of the Press and revived by the Fascist Syndicate of Journalists, with some modifications, stipulates that every dispute which may arise from the interpretation of the contract shall be settled by professional courts (Collegi Probivirali) whose rules of procedure are annexed to the agreement (Article 27). Under the terms of these rules a professional court is established at the seat of ten regional syndicates (13 in the old contract) and their jurisdiction extends to all the journalists inscribed in the syndicates and in the regional album of journalists. A national court (Collegio Probivirale Federale) at Rome serves as a court of appeal. The regional courts are composed of publishers and journalists, or their representatives, in equal numbers. They may not be composed of more than six members or less than four plus two substitutes. The national court is composed in the same way ; it may not have more than eight members or less than six plus two substitutes. The members are appointed for two years, the presidents for one year. The latter are nominated by the members of the courts, who come to an agreement for this purpose. If it is impossible to realise an agreement, they are nominated, in the case of the national court, by the president of the court of appeal (Corle di Cassazione), — 96 — and, in the case of the regional courts, by the presidents of the civil courts of the various regions. The decisions of the regional professional courts may form the subject of an appeal to the national court when the petition relates to a sum of more t h a n 75,000 lire, when the regional court concerned has not given a unanimous decision on a question of principle relating to the interpretation of a contract, or simply when the two parties are in agreement to appeal. I n all other cases decisions are final and without appeal, and may be given executive force in conformity with the provisions of section 24 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The working expenses of the courts (Collegi Probivirali) are met in equal parts by the two contracting organisations. The professional courts enjoy great prestige in Italian journalism. Particular care is devoted to the choice of their members ; they are often persons of the highest importance (the president of the national court is at the present time the Attorney-General of the Court of Appeal at Rome). I n Japan there are no special courts for the settlement of disputes in journalism. The same remark applies to Latvia. I n Luxemburg disputes between directors and journalists are rare. When they do occur, it is the Act of 31 October 1919 relating to private employees which comes into play. Section 26 of this law instituted in each canton an arbitral tribunal composed of a justice of the peace and two assessors one of whom is chosen by the employers and the other by the employees. The case may be carried in appeal before the Supreme Court of Justice. In the Netherlands disputes are simply submitted to a justice of the peace. Disputes arising in Poland concerning questions of employment are brought before the ordinary courts or before the Ministry of Labour and Social Assistance (this is the procedure provided for by law but not used in journalism) or, finally, before arbitral commissions specified in the collective agreements. The Association of Journalists intervenes whenever it can, to settle disputes in a friendly way. — 97 — I n Rumania disputes which the Press associations cannot settle in a friendly way are brought before the ordinary courts. The collective agreement of the minority Press of Transylvania, on the other hand, institutes an arbitral committee of three members entrusted with the settlement of disputes between journalists and publishers. I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom the Decree of 25 September 1926 on journalists lays down t h a t "all litigation referring to working conditions must be submitted to a special court. This court is a permanent institution created in all important towns where several newspapers appear, and its continuity is guaranteed by the president, nominated for three years from among the judges of the town by the Ministry of Justice. The other judges, not more than four in number, shall be chosen for each case, two by the journalists and two by the publishers" (section 13). The decisions of the court have immediate effect and are without appeal. I n Spain the joint Press committees x created in J a n u a r y 1927 in virtue of the legislative Decree of 26 November 1926 on the corporative organisation of the nation, have, among other tasks, t h a t of settling disputes which may arise in connection with the working conditions of journalists. The Press associations, on their side, endeavour to settle disputes in a friendly manner: Apart from recourse to the ordinary courts, the agreement established in Sweden by the Association of Journalists provides t h a t disputes shall be brought either before the Press Commission or before an arbitral council. Swiss journalists may apply in case of disputes either to the ordinary courts or to the arbitral court instituted by the agreements of 1919 relating to permanent journalists and to independent journalists. This court is composed of four judges and four substitutes appointed for three years on a joint basis by the two contracting associations, and a president elected by the judges. The execution of the arbitral decision is guaranteed by the two organisations. 1 Cf. t The Status of the Journalist •, p. 73. 7 — 98 — In the United States disputes arising in journalism are within the competence of the ordinary civil courts. I n the U. S. S. R. the Labour Code (sections 168-174) provides for a series of professional courts from the joint commission of the undertaking 1 , to the arbitration court which decides without appeal. . With the exception of the joint commission of the undertaking, these various jurisdictions do not specially concern journalists. I t will be apparent from the foregoing resume t h a t journalists, as we pointed out at the beginning of this chapter, display a very marked tendency to avoid recourse to the ordinary courts for the settlement of their professional disputes. When they have not been able to obtain a special jurisdiction, their organisations endeavour to settle conflicts in a friendly way in conformity with the usages of the profession, and thus t r y to spare the person concerned the expenses, which are often considerable, and the delays of the ordinary civil procedure. Wherever the establishment of a collective regime has furnished them with an opportunity, they have not failed to institute arbitral commissions or special professional courts (tribunaux prud'hommaux) either permanent or constituted for each particular case. These courts are generally established on a joint basis. Their members, nominated in equal numbers by the journalists and the employers, usually elect a president whom the contracts are careful to require to be independent, and frequently a lawyer by profession. According to the system instituted by the Serb-Croat-Slovene Decree, it is the president, nominated by the Minister of Justice, who ensures the continuity of the court which in other respects is constituted afresh on the occasion of each dispute. The journalists hold strongly t o this system of arbitration and special jurisdictions, which appears to give excellent results in the countries in which it has been instituted. They are endeavouring to get it adopted everywhere, and the International Federation of Journalists regards it as one of those problems whose solution would give an indispensable minimum of guarantee to all concerned. The Federation has applied itself since its creation to the study of the question and has even placed it, 1 The control of the decisions of the joint commissions is a matter for the Labour Commissariat. — 99 — together with the question of the termination of services with which, moreover, it is closely bound up, on its agenda for immediate action. A little after its first Congress a t the end of 1926, it despatched proposals and a note on this question to the affiliated national organisations, and since then it has not ceased t o devote attention to it. I t would seem t h a t the day is not far off when the journalists of all the countries in which journalism constitutes a well-defined profession will obtain the special jurisdictions which they are demanding, and to which, moreover, the employers themselves seem to hold firmly in the countries in which they are instituted. IV W O R K I N G CONDITIONS H O U R S OP W O R K When an examination is made of working conditions in any profession whatsoever, one of the first questions which arises is t h a t of hours of work. How much time should the worker devote to his task? How much may he reserve for his leisure and his rest? Is there a danger of overwork in the profession which he practises? Do work, leisure, and rest harmonise in such a way as to ensure the individual's physical and intellectual development, the satisfaction of his artistic tastes, and his need for recreation a n d recuperation? Or does the calling dangerously encroach on the other requirements of life? These questions, which it is possible t o answer in the case of manual workers because the working process is a visible thing, whose beginning, end, and intensity, can be easily verified, may perhaps appear vain when intellectual workers are concerned, and this for many reasons. The main reason (which obviates the need of giving others — indeed there will be no room to do so in this survey) is t h a t intellectual work, by reason of its indefinite nature, and, as it were, its dispersion, does not lend itself to precise measurement. Intellectual activity is at every moment bound up with the life of an individual to such an extent, and professional pre-occupations have such a tendency to reappear at every instant of intellectual activity, t h a t it is impossible to say precisely at what moment an intellectual worker begins to produce what his profession requires of him and at what moment he stops. When does a political or dramatic writer — to take an example from the profession under consideration — begin, and when does he finish work? At what moment can we catch him in the full swing of professional activity? Is it at the editorial offices of the paper, to which he will go, perhaps, to write or to dictate his article, or simply to get into touch with his colleagues and to seek the — 101 — latest news t Is it a t the theatre, at a poUtical meeting, or at home reading a critical work or an historical study, or yet again during his meal or during conversation with friends, when an idea flashes through his mind, bringing other ideas in its train and allowing him to build up, there and then, the entire framework of his article? Is he working, or is he resting, when he travels, or when he reads ? Could he himself differentiate exactly between the moments devoted to his professional work and those reserved to undisturbed recreation 1 We do not wish to depict the intellectual worker as a person whose untamed spirit, rebelling against all discipline, works in its own way, launches out unexpectedly and respects neither time nor place. To be sure, the intellectual worker has his moments of deliberate concentration, and he has his desk, where the most tangible part of his task is performed. B u t surrounding these moments of intense and disciplined work, which vary with the individual, there is an ill-defined zone in which it cannot be said t h a t he has finished with his professional work b u t in which, on the other hand, purely professional activity cannot be recognised with certainty. To this difficulty of distinguishing the periods of purely professional activity in the life of an intellectual worker from those which may be counted as unalloyed leisure is added in the case of certain professions, t h a t of ascertaining the sum of the periods of professional activity accomplished in different places. And this is, indeed, the situation in a great part of journalism. Supposing t h a t it has been possible to give an exact definition of journalistic work, and to decide, leaving out of account all periods of productiveness mingled with periods of leisure, whether the time spent by a journalist in seeing a play with a view to furnishing an account of it, the time which another spends in the train on the way to a neighbouring town to be present at some event there, or the time which yet another devotes to the reading of works necessary for the preparation of his article, must be regarded as effective d u t y ; supposing, in brief, t h a t a complete definition of journalistic work has been arrived at, it would still be necessary to count all the moments of this activity in order to reconstitute the journalist's working day. This, however, is an impossible task. The time t h a t each journalist devotes to his work cannot be accounted for, as conditions vary with the post and with the person, and his work is generally done partly in the editorial offices, partly outside (in — 102 — the town, at courts, etc.) and partly at home. We are compelled to confine the computation of hours to the only controllable periods with clearly drawn limits — those which the journalist spends in the offices of the paper. I t is these hours which will be taken as the hours of work of the journalist in the following brief analysis. The foregoing remarks show how slight is the relation existing between these hours of writing and the real professional activity of the journalist, full knowledge of which we cannot hope to have. All t h a t can be done is to examine how the question of hours of presence in the editorial offices has been settled in various countries, bearing well in mind t h a t these hours give us no indication of the aggregate of the journalist's labours. I n these circumstances it may well be asked what is the use of an investigation of this kind, and what conclusions can be reached on the basis of fragmentary and even misleading data. In our opinion a glance over the hours of work of the journalist, or to be more exact, over his hours of presence in the offices of the paper, is fully justified. I t is of importance to know whether there is a question of hours of work in journalism, whether it constitutes a problem with which the members of the profession have been dealing, or, on the contrary, whether it is a question entirely without significance, which journalists have never thought of subjecting to regulation. I t is very difficult, for countries in which neither legislation nor collective agreement exists, to furnish precise information on the hours of work of journalists. I t is no secret t h a t more often t h a n not, even in the editorial offices, no record is kept of hours of presence, and according to circumstances the same journalist may have very short working days or very long ones. There are, however, established customs which allow some general data to be furnished. Below will be seen how customs, and sometimes collective agreements, and occasionally legislation, have treated hours of work in various countries. What has just been said with regard to hours of work must, however, be borne in mind, and if the journalist's working day as expressed by the figures given here sometimes seems rather short, it must not be forgotten that it only represents for most grades (with the exception of sub-editors and a few grades whose continued presence is a necessity for the paper) a part of the time which they devote to their profession. Finally, it must be recalled t h a t these hours are for the most part hours of the night. — 103 — The Australian journalists, like their colleagues in Great Britain, attached importance to having the question of hours of work incorporated in their collective agreement. B u t no country possesses such minute regulations on the subject as Australia. Three chapters are allotted to it in the agreement of January 1924, which is still in force. The agreement makes a clear distinction between day work and night work, and provides different weekly figures for each. The hours of day work must not exceed forty-six in the week for any journalist. All overtime work must be deducted from the hours of work of one of the two following weeks, or paid at a special rate. Work begins in an evening paper a t 9.45 a.m. at the latest, and in a morning paper at 5.30 p.m. a t the earliest and 6.30 p.m. a t the latest. An attendance register in a form approved by the secretary of the Federal Arbitration Court is kept in the editorial offices and every journalist records his arrival and departure therein. Entries t h a t are not contested within twenty-four hours are considered as valid. The attendance register is open to control by any member of the staff, by the general secretary of the Association of Journalists and by any member of the Association authorised by the secretary of t h e Court of Arbitration. The time between arrival and departure is taken as work time, excluding the time taken for meals. The employer has the faculty of interrupting the work, but the contract surrounds this practice with various safeguards. The period of interruption may not be less t h a n three hours (in order to prevent the employer from interrupting work at every instant and to ensure t h a t the periods of interruption are not too short to be made use of by the person concerned). Furthermore, the journalist must be warned at least one hour in advance. Finally, these interruptions may only take effect at certain times in the day (Article 3, § 2). In Austria the Act of 11 February 1920 relating to the status of journalists contains no provision concerning hours of work. On the other hand, the collective agreement in force in the Viennese Press has several Articles on the subject. I t stipulates t h a t " the regular hours of work, whose maximum and allocation must be fixed in accordance with the usual practices of the paper and its real needs, must not exceed forty-two in the week for newspapers appearing twice in the day and for newspapers appear- — 104 — ing once in the morning, and thirty-six hours for midday and evening papers appearing only once a day " (Article 16). The hours of work must be indicated in the individual contracts. All work done outside the agreed hours is regarded as overtime work and must be paid at a special rate. The authors of the agreement were aware of the fact t h a t the work of the journalist, by its very nature, eludes any strict time limitation. Nevertheless, they felt obliged to deal with this question in the agreement to remedy abuses in certain undertakings which did not scruple to keep the journalists ten and twelve hours and even more at the writing desk. I n Belgium the hours of work are not subject to regulations. They vary greatly according to the paper and the job, but the commonest working day seems to be of six hours. I n Brazil there are no regulations governing hours of work. In morning papers the writers and reporters go to the editorial offices at 2 p.m. and at 6 p.m. to receive instructions concerning their work. From 2 p.m. till about 8 p.m. shifts of day writers prepare the first news. At 9 o'clock the night writers arrive, and they finish their work at about 1 a.m. Generally speaking the daily hours of work do not exceed six. The Bulgarian journalists also are not governed by any regulations concerning hours of work. In practice the hours hardly ever exceed five or six in the day. Czechoslovak journalists come within the scope of the Act of 1918 relating to hours of work. Their normal day is therefore of eight hours, but more often than not circumstances do not require such a long period of presence in the editorial offices, and the hours of work are shorter than those fixed by the law. The collective agreement of the Prager Presse lays down t h a t they may not exceed seven in the day, which may be divided into not more than two parts. I n France there is no regulation of the hours of work of journalists and they are subject to urdimited variations. Many papers do not even calculate the number of the hours of presence or of effective work. — 105 — I n Germany there is at present only one example of regulations governing the hours of work in the profession of journahsm, and t h a t is furnished by the Union of the Labour Press which, in its agreement concluded more than twenty years ago with the newspapers of the Social-Democratic Party, fixed the daily hours a t the editorial offices a t a maximum of six. The journalists who are not included in this agreement are endeavouring to extend the advantages of the eight-hour day to their profession, but the nature of their work, the methods of editorial offices, and the psychological habits of all concerned constitute a serious obstacle to these efforts. I n Great Britain the duration of work is not governed by law. Only the collective agreements which apply to the big London papers and to the news agencies have fixed its extent. They provide for a working week of five and a half days, each of eight hours, t h a t is, a total of forty-four hours including meal times, for day writers and photographic operators. Generally speaking, the hours of work of reporters must not exceed fortyfour in the week unless they are obliged to work out of town. Hungarian journalists do not benefit from any regulations concerning hours of work. They do not think t h a t hours can be subject to rigid prescriptions, and, moreover, do not complain of their own hours of work. I n Italy the journalists have not thought it necessary to seek explicit regulations concerning hours of work. They do not hold t h a t such regulation would be possible in a profession in which the time devoted to work is spent in differing surroundings and varies not only with the place and with the undertaking, b u t also with the individual and the kind of work entrusted to him. Hence the collective agreement in force merely declares t h a t the management of the paper shall establish a time-table if it thinks it necessary. Neither Japan nor Latvia has any regulations concerning hours of work in journalism. I t is impossible even to furnish information concerning the working day, which varies considerably. The Luxemburg journalists are subject to the Act of 31 October 1919 regulating the hours of work of employees. I n virtue of — 106 — section 6 of this Act, the normal working day is of eight hours. Overtime work is in principle paid a t a higher rate than normal work. As a great part of the work is done a t home, it is rarely t h a t a journalist spends the legal eight hours at the editorial offices. In practice the hours of presence hardly ever exceed six. The hours of work are not governed by regulations in the Netherlands, and no general custom has been established in this domain. There are no regulations in Poland. I t is true, however, t h a t some of the clauses of the Bill concerning journalists which was placed before the Diet deal with hours of work, and under the terms of this Bill individual or collective agreements governing the relations between the publisher and the journalist must specify the number of hours of work t h a t the journalist is obliged t o furnish. The normal duration of work, according to the draft, is six hours. The collective agreement a t present in force in Warsaw does not mention the point. I n Portugal and Rumania there is no regulation of hours of work in journalism, and they vary greatly according to the post and to circumstances. I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom the Decree of 25 September 1926, which determines the status of journalists, has nothing to say with regard to hours of work. The hours of work of journalists are not governed by regulations in Spain, and they vary considerably. In some cases journalists are only present a t the editorial offices two or three hours a day, and the rest of their work is done at home, but in others, their hours of presence exceed eight in the day. They usually work from 6 t o 9 p.m. and from 10.30 p.m. to 2 or 3 a.m. in the editorial offices of papers appearing in the morning ; and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 to 7 p.m. in the offices of the evening papers. I n Sweden, in the absence of legal restriction of hours of work, the model contract adopted by the Association of Publishers and the Association of Journalists contains a clause by which the hours are fixed at seven or eight in the day in normal times. Little work is done at home. — 107 — The Swiss journalists do not appear to attach importance to fixed hours of work. At all events, the agreement concluded in 1923 by their association and the Association of Newspaper Publishers specifies t h a t " presence a t the editorial offices during strictly prescribed hours cannot be requested unless it is required in the interest of the paper " (Article 11, § 1). I t adds : " When a Press writer is compelled t o be present in editorial offices during prescribed hours, he is entitled to an indemnity for the work done for the paper out of office hours " (Article 11, § 3). These provisions perhaps reveal a tendency among Swiss journalists to resist the industrialisation of newspapers and to preserve a certain amount of liberty in the employment of their time. I n the United States the working day, which does not form the subject of any regulations, varies from six to ten hours according to the kind of paper and other circumstances. The Labour Code of the U.S.S.R. (sections 94 and 95) establishes an eight-hour day for all salaried workers. I n addition, an Order of the Labour Commissariat dated 11 March 1925 contains certain precise stipulations with regard to journalists. I n virtue of this Order, journalists working for daily or weekly papers enjoy the eight-hour day. The hours of work are six for journalists belonging to magazines, or to official or semi-official papers not for public sale. I t does not seem t h a t these measures are strictly carried out with regard to daily and weekly papers. At least, this is what a trade union author x gives one to understand when he writes : " The organisation of work is still far from perfection in our editorial offices. The hours of work can only be regulated with difficulty. I n the present conditions dominating the existence of the periodical Press (daily and weekly papers) the regulation of work in editorial offices is only a pleasant dream. I n fact, not only is the work of this class of employees not subject to regulation, but, what is more, it is often not possible to calculate its exact duration" The author thinks t h a t the eight-hour day " is not enforceable a t the present time ". On the other hand, the six-hour day is, as a rule, satisfactorily observed in magazines not appearing more than once a month. 1 V. DEMBO : Troudovie prava rabotnikov litteratury. Moscow, 1926. — 108 — The foregoing remarks will have made it clear that, in spite of the difficulties which may be encountered in attempting to measure the duration of journalistic work and to enclose it within rigid limits, many collective agreements contain detailed clauses on this point. Their object was to prevent abuses threatened by the tendency of certain papers to require their staffs to be present for some specified length of time in the editorial offices, a tendency which the evolution of the modern Press seems to accentuate. As the activity of the journalist is seldom restricted to the work done in the editorial offices, and the hours spent there are generally not the only ones which he devotes to his profession, it was natural enough for measures to be taken to ensure t h a t the regular hours of work in the office or on reporting duty did not exceed certain limits. The draft agreement which the International Federation of Journalists drew up in March 1927 included the principle of a detailed regulation of hours of work. NIGHT WORK Many newspapers, perhaps the majority, appear in the morning, which means t h a t their staffs must work mainly at night. I n numerous editorial offices the bulk of the work is done by artificial light. The journalists who belong to these papers are thus exposed to all the drawbacks of night work : danger to health, disturbance of family life, etc. When they are employed on papers which appear in several editions, some in the morning and others in the evening, there is a temptation to lay day and night tasks upon them which are apt to be beyond their strength, unless the undertaking is large enough to be able to organise some kind of rotation as do the big news agencies which work without interruption night and day, and resort to the system of three shifts of eight hours each. I t is not at all surprising t h a t attempts should have been made to regulate the duration and the methods of night work as day work has been regulated. There are, however, numerous countries in which there are no regulations on the subject and where everything is left to custom and to individual arrangements. Below will be found a brief statement of the situation in various countries. — 109 — The Australian collective agreement contains a clause relating to night work. By the terms of this clause, the working week must not exceed forty hours spread over five nights for journalists ordinarily employed on night work. These journalists must be freed from all work from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. The maximum of forty hours does not apply to the Sunday edition of daily evening papers. The maximum in this case is forty-six hours (Article 36). The agreement defines night work as work the greater part of which must be done between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. The day on which a journalist takes the weekly half holiday granted by the agreement, the four hours' work which he can be called upon to furnish must be done in the morning or the afternoon, unless the half-holiday immediately precedes or follows the full day's holiday which is also granted ; in this case only, the four hours may be worked at night between 7 p.m. and midnight (Articles 3c and 9). The Austrian journalists have obtained certain regulations governing night work in their collective agreement a t present in force. These regulations aim at preventing the employment of the same journalists on day and night work. They lay down t h a t collaborators who are regularly employed on night work and whose services are thus prolonged beyond 12.30 a.m. must not be. employed on the following evening before the ordinary hours of work, except on Mondays and days which follow the rest days of the undertaking. Only the members of the night editorial staff who do not begin work before 10.30 p.m. are excluded from this provision. They may not be employed on any work before 12.30 p.m., again excepting Mondays and days which follow the rest days of the undertaking (Article 16, § 4). If very important events have compelled journalists to work beyond the agreed times on several days in one week, they must l>e given compensation in the form of rest in proportion to the additional time worked (Article 16, § 5). Night work is not governed by regulations in Belgium, Bulgaria, and Canada. Brazil, In Czechoslovakia, there are no legal provisions applicable to the night work of journalists. This work, which is performed more or less according to the needs of various papers, is passed — 110 — over in silence in the collective agreement as far as its duration is concerned. On the other hand, the agreements generally provide, as does t h a t of the Prager Presse, an additional holiday of one week for journalists on the night staff. There are no regulations in France. Night work is current practice. The night journalistic staff generally work from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. with a break of an hour and a half or two hours for dinner. I n addition, there is always someone present up to 4 a.m. I n Germany, night work is not covered by any regulations in the national collective agreement, which deals neither with its duration nor with rates of payment. Only the regional agreements respecting rates of payment mention night work, and then it is for the purpose of fixing its remuneration, which is higher than t h a t for day work, generally b y 50 per cent. I n Great Britain, the night work of journalists, which is not subject to any legal restriction, is very common. Custom requires t h a t the hours of work for the night staff shall be about forty in the week. The collective agreement concluded in March 1921 by the Newspaper Proprietors' Association and the National Union of Journalists, and which relates to the big London papers, fixes the weekly hours of work for the night staff a t five and a half nights of seven hours each, including time taken for meals. Hungary and India have no regulations concerning night work in journalism, and conditions in these countries are too varied to be described. I n Italy, night work, which is subject to no regulations with regard to its duration, is paid at a higher rate than day work. I n Japan and Latvia, there is a complete absence of regulations. I n Luxemburg, night work, without being prohibited, is unknown in journalism, as the newspapers nearly all appear between 11 a.m. and 12.30 p.m. The two papers appearing in the evening on the days when the Chamber of Deputies is sitting, leave the press at 6.30 p.m. Only one paper has a morning edition, but printing — Ill — finishes at 9 p.m. so t h a t nothing but the distribution is done in the morning. I n the Netherlands there are no regulations. I n Poland there are no legal regulations, but the Bill at present in preparation- provides t h a t journalists employed after midnight shall be free until the following evening. The collective agreement concluded by the Association of Warsaw Journalists only mentions night work for the purpose of fixing its remuneration, which is higher than t h a t for day work. According to the terms of this agreement, only work done after 11 p.m. is considered as night work. I n Portugal, night work, which is fairly common, is not the subject of any regulations. The night work of Rumanian journalists is also subject to no regulation. The collective agreement of the minority Press of Transylvania is silent on this point. In the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, there are no regulations. The Decree of September 1926 contains no provisions relating to night work. No difference is made work. Both are paid a t hand, the night work of work (five pesetas a week in Spain between night work and day one rate in journalism. On the other printers is paid a little more t h a n day on an average). I n Sweden, the model contract adopted by the Press Federation and the Society of Publishers contains no clauses on night work, which is executed in the following way : On the morning papers the work of a journalist is generally divided into two parts, one part being accomplished in the day time (from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., for example), and the other a t night time (from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., for example). I n most of these papers, it is usual to work only five nights a week. There are always one or two journalists who do nothing but night work (from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m., for example). According to the terms of the standard contract, the salary of journalists attached t o a morning paper is higher than t h a t of the staff of other papers. — 112 — Switzerland possesses no regulations on night work in journalism. I n the United States, a great deal of editorial work is done at night. There are no regulations on the subject. I n the U.S.S.B., there are no provisions governing the night work of journalists. I n the majority of cases such work is paid a t rates 50 per cent, higher t h a n the day rates. From this cursory examination, it will be seen that, though in many countries night work is in no way distinguished from day work, and journalists are at the mercy in this respect to a certain arbitrariness moderated here and there by custom, in other countries the Press organisations have endeavoured to secure t h a t night work shall be treated differently from day work. Three methods have been employed for this purpose : the establishment of shorter periods than for day work ; higher payment ; the granting of special rest time to members of the staff employed on night work. These three methods tend to assure the night staff of compensation for work entailing obvious disadvantages and to encourage the employers to reduce night work to a minimum. Some agreements, in addition, endeavour t o secure adequate daily rest time by preventing, for example, a journalist who has worked far into the night from being required to restart work early in the morning. The draft collective agreement published by the International Federation of Journalists recommended special regulations for night work with regard to both remuneration and duration. WEEKLY REST Weekly rest, which has taken firm root, and which has been sanctioned by law in most professions, is still an open question in journalism in several countries. There was a time when the modern conception of the daily newspaper seemed to make journalism a profession apart, to which established usages in the matter of rest could not be applied. Journalists have had to fight a long time to get the necessity of a weekly rest day admitted. I n some countries they have not yet succeeded, and, although usages may have been established here and there in this respect, they — 113 — are not sanctioned and generalised by any collective agreement or by any law. In other countries, it is only very recently t h a t journalists have secured the extension to their profession of the protection which legislation has long accorded to other callings. I t must, moreover, be added t h a t even in countries where this legal protection exists there is no certainty t h a t it is fully efficacious. Control is difficult. I t is not without trouble t h a t the daily papers which do not possess a large staff organise a system of shifts t h a t allows a part of this staff to take its days of rest. Specialisation, which is the rule in the modern Press, increases these difficulties still more, and hardly anywhere but in the countries in which custom or law prohibit the publication of papers one day a week can one be sure t h a t the weekly rest is observed in all editorial offices. The situation in the different countries with regard to weekly rest is the following : Australian journalists have had interesting clauses incorporated in their collective agreement on the subject of weekly rest. The agreement lays down the general rule t h a t every journalist must enjoy one and a half days' liberty a week. The half-day must not begin later t h a n 1 p.m. (Chapter 3, Article a, § 2). For journalists on the night staff the rest time amounts to two nights a week (ibid., Article b). The day on which a journalist takes his half-day off, he may not be required to furnish more than four hours' work. Instead of the weekly half-holiday a journalist may be granted an entire day every fortnight (ibid., Article c, § 9). Finally, if the weekly holiday of a day and a half cannot be given to a journalist, it must be paid at a rate 50 per cent, higher than the ordinary rate (ibid., § 10). In Austria, weekly rest forms the subject of special provisions of the collective agreement of the Viennese Press. Article 16 lays down t h a t Sunday work shall be avoided as far as possible. All work done on Sunday or on days when the undertaking is closed must receive special payment. Exceptions are made for accounts of theatrical performances, sporting and artistic events, etc., which take place on Sunday. The general Act on weekly rest, which establishes the five and a half day week, requires all the undertakings in the country to cease work a t 2 p.m. on Saturday. As this system was not applic8 — 114 — able to newspapers which have an edition appearing early on Sunday morning, a stipulation has been made in the collective contract, with the consent of the Government, t h a t every journalist should be entitled to a half-day a week, in addition to Sunday. No one may renounce this half-day, which begins at 2 p.m. A system of rotation is established in each department by agreement among the staff for the purpose of choosing time for the weekly half-holiday. Belgian journalists as a rule are not given any weekly rest. Certain newspapers, however, endeavour to give it them by granting their staff one day's leave in the week when they have to work on Sunday. I n Brazil, measures concerning weekly rest depend on the States, and often even on the municipalities. They vary considerably from place to place. In the federal capital and in several States, Sunday work is formally prohibited. There are no legal provisions concerning weekly rest in Bulgaria. I t is, however, with rare exceptions, satisfactorily observed in journalism. I n Czechoslovakia, the Act of 1918 on the eight-hour day and the forty-eight-hour week guarantees one day's holiday a week to journalists. Newspapers do not appear on Monday morning, and this assures journalists of at least thirty-six hours' rest. The Saturday half-holiday has not been adopted in Czechoslovak journalism. I n France, on 9 and 11 July 1925 respectively, the Chamber and the Senate voted an Act which extended the provisions of the legislation concerning weekly rest to " the personnel employed on editorial work in newspaper undertakings or news agencies ". This Act, which satisfied the demand repeatedly formulated by the Association of Journalists, is the first event of a legal order affecting the working conditions of journalists in France. The Act of 13 July 1906 relating to weekly rest, which the vote of the two Chambers extended to journalists, forbids the employment for more than six days in the week of " the same employee or workman ". I t prescribes t h a t " weekly rest must have a minimum duration of twenty-four consecutive hours " — 115 — (section 32), and t h a t " weekly rest must be given on Sunday " (section 33). Simultaneous rest is the rule ; the system of rotation is only allowed exceptionally by prefectorial authorisation (section 34). Consultation between associations of employers and workmen is envisaged for the establishment of regimes of exception which have received prefectorial authorisation. In virtue of the Decree of 24 August 1906, the heads of undertakings who, in consequence of exceptions provided for in the law, or of subsequent derogations, give weekly rest otherwise than by granting a full day's leave on Sunday, must indicate, by means of a notice, the days and hours of the rest time of their personnel. I t is difficult to know to what extent the law is observed in journalism and whether there is adequate supervision for its enforcement. In Germany before the conclusion of the national agreement, certain regional agreements allowed the principle of weekly rest. An example is the agreement for East Prussia (July 1920) which, without clearly laying down the obligation to grant rest, implicitly admitted its existence by providing higher rates of salary for work done on Sundays and holidays. Another example is the agreement for the Bavarian Press (June 1921), which declares t h a t every journalist obliged to work on Sunday shall be given an afternoon in the week in compensation. Since the conclusion of the national collective agreement the question of weekly rest has been governed by clear regulations throughout German journalism. Article 8 of the agreement states t h a t " every journalist must be granted an uninterrupted rest of twenty-four hours in the week. When, in exceptional circumstances, this rest cannot be granted a different allocation of rest time may be resorted to ". I n Great Britain, the collective agreement established by the National Union of Journalists provides for one and a half days' rest a week for day workers and one and a half nights' rest for night workers. The rest of half a night is granted in -the form of one full night every fortnight, or two full nights every four weeks, at the discretion of the management. The principle of the half-holiday is not to modify the practice of granting a full day's leave in compensation for the long hours worked on Saturday for publications appearing on Sunday. — 116 — Hungarian journalists are not mentioned in the legislation concerning weekly rest. However, the Decree of 18 November 1921, which establishes Sunday rest in trade and industry, and which in consequence prevents the printing of newspapers on Sunday, indirectly procures a weekly holiday for journalists. The weekly rest of Italian journalists is ensured by the Royal Decree of 23 J u n e 1923, which lays down t h a t " all daily newspapers must omit one issue of every edition each week, so t h a t no edition appears more than six times a week " (section 1). From 1 p.m. on Sunday to midday on Monday, no newspaper, not even a daily paper, may be published either in an ordinary edition or a special edition (section 6). A Royal Decree of 7 October 1923, modifying the preceding Decree provides that " in no printing works shall the work of printing any kind of periodicals be begun between 6 a.m. on Sunday and 6 a.m. on Monday ". I n Latvia, on the other hand, there are no regulations concerning the weekly rest of journalists. I n Luxemburg, in virtue of section 9 of the Act of 31 October 1919, employees must be granted a weekly rest of thirty-eight consecutive hours. This rest time must coincide with Sunday as far as possible. Of all the Luxemburg dailies, only one has a Sunday edition, and this is printed on Saturday evening ; in consequence it does not in any way militate against the enforcement of the Act. If the editors of important political papers are often at their posts on Sunday afternoon, they enjoy, in compensation, a certain amount of latitude as regards their Monday duty. I n the Netherlands, there are no legal provisions concerning the weekly rest of journalists, but generally speaking, they have Sunday to themselves. The Bill at present under discussion in the Polish Diet provides t h a t every journalist shall be entitled to rest on Sunday. For the moment, the question is not subject to regulations, and the collective agreement concluded by the Association of Warsaw Journalists makes no allusion to it. There is no law in Portugal applicable to the weekly rest of journalists. The majority of them demand t h a t Sunday shall — 117 — be recognised as a rest day throughout the profession. All the daily papers of Oporto and several of those a t Lisbon, especially the evening papers, have already adopted this system. Rumanian journalists come within the scope of the Act of 18 J u n e 1925 concerning rest on Sundays and holidays. This Act stipulates t h a t the employees of industrial and commercial establishments shall be given twenty-four consecutive hours' rest on Sundays and holidays. A certain number of exceptions to this rule are envisaged, but section 10 expressly declares t h a t the editorial staffs of newspapers are covered by the provisions of the law. Journalists who are obliged to work on a holiday are entitled, in compensation, to take their time off on a work-day according t o a system of rotation to be established by common accord between employers and employees. In Spain, an Order of 1919 prohibits newspapers from appearing on Sunday evening and Monday morning. This measure ensures weekly rest to Spanish journalists. The guarantee of Sunday rest is indeed (leaving the question of salaries out of account) the only change which has occurred since 1914 in the working conditions of journalists. On several occasions a number of publishers have endeavoured to secure the abrogation of these legal provisions. Each time their efforts raised such opposition t h a t the Government, a t the request of the delegations of the journalists, renounced any intention of modifying the new state of affairs. I t was to resist a threatened danger of this kind that the Professional Group of Madrid Journalists was created at the end of 1926. In Sweden, in the absence of legal provisions applicable to journalists, weekly rest is amply ensured to them by custom, and by a clause in the model contract established by the Association of Newspaper Proprietors and the Association of Journalists. Under the terms of this contract, rest time amounting to thirtysix consecutive hours must be granted every week to the various newspaper workers. The agreement on conditions of employment concluded in 1923 by the Swiss Press Association provides t h a t all Sunday work shall be compensated by suitable rest granted in the week (Article 11, § 2). — 118 — When a journalist has had t o do overtime work, he is entitled, in addition to special remuneration, to an afternoon off (Article 11, §3). I n the United States, the weekly rest of journalists is left t o the discretion of the newspaper publishers, but it is a fairly general practice. The Labour Code of the U.S.S.B. declares (section 109) t h a t every worker is entitled to forty-two consecutive hours' rest a week. In order t o allow of the application of this measure to the Press, newspapers do not appear on Monday. Thus the usages established in different countries have a distinct tendency to ensure one day's rest a week to journalists, and furthermore to make this day Sunday. These usages are, however, rather unstable and sometimes the requirements of the publication prevail against them. Therefore journalists who possess collective contracts have not thought it idle t o incorporate in them the obligation to give weekly rest, and endeavour to obtain t h a t it shall be permanently given on Sunday, or at least t h a t it shall not be split up. The rest provided for is of at least twenty-four hours and if possible, a day and a half. One contract, t h a t of the Austrian journalists, has even provided against the risk of excessive work which the employers may perhaps be tempted to impose on their staff before and after the fixed rest day. Finally, in two cases the journalists concerned have attached importance to stipulating t h a t the institution of weekly rest does not do away with the obligation to grant special leave in compensation for specially fatiguing work. In some countries weekly rest is ensured to journalists by a law which may go as far as prohibiting, as it does in Italy, the publication of newspapers on Sunday and Monday morning, even in a special edition. Obviously only a measure of this kind can guarantee Sunday rest to all journalists. ANNUAL LEAVE Of all the intellectual professions, very few are as exhausting as journalism. Such information as is available on the subject, scanty as it is, suffices to indicate what the establishment of good statistics of morbidity and mortality in journalism and — 119 — their comparison with the statistics of other professions would disclose. A journalist must have a constitution of iron. The time of his work, which is done in great part at night, the conditions in which the work is done, and among these conditions especially the rush imposed by the high speed of newspaper work, are all causes of fatigue. We know to what extent the journalist is threatened by premature old age. At forty years of age, a journalist who has not taken care of himself, and who does not possess a particularly sound constitution, may find himself in a difficult position in the labour market. The night shifts, the intensity of the work, and various other causes, may very easily have undermined his energy even at that age. There is only one remedy to this state of affairs. The methods of work cannot change ; they are bound up with the very nature of the newspaper. The only remedy is to allow a journalist to recuperate from time to time the strength which he loses in his exhausting activities. After the limitation of the hours of work, the regulation of the methods of night work, and the institution and the strict observance of weekly rest, the obtainment of adequate holidays is a question of vital importance for the journalist. No one has more need than he of bodily and mental rest from time to time. I t is only on this condition t h a t he can satisfy the requirements of an arduous calling and avoid the overwork which threatens to make him old before his time. This judicious determination of the hours of work and rest, vitally important for him at the present time, will become more and more necessary in the future, as the industrial character of the newspaper becomes more marked, compelling the labour of the mind to follow the movement of the machine and to adopt the processes of intensive production. A rapid examination will now be made of the manner in which various countries have settled the question of annual leave in journalism. The collective agreement of Australian journalists contains rather detailed regulations concerning annual leave. I t provides (Chapter 14) t h a t every journalist regularly employed shall be entitled to three weeks' holiday on full pay. When holidays begin on Monday and the employee has worked the preceding Sunday, they must be taken as beginning on Tuesday. — 120 — If a journalist resigns his post before the completion of one year's service, he is not entitled to any leave. If it is the employer who breaks the contract, and if he does so after six months' service, the journalist is entitled to leave in proportion to the length of his services. Sick leave also receives special treatment in the collective agreement, which provides t h a t every journalist shall be entitled to a certain amount of sick leave with pay, under the following conditions : (1) If he has less than six months' service, he is entitled to one week with full pay, one week with half pay, and a third week with quarter pay. (2) After six months' service, he may take four weeks with full pay, four weeks with half pay, and four weeks with quarter pay. Absences due to sick leave are added up for the year and must not be considered separately. The Austrian journalists are certainly the most privileged as regards holidays, which with them are subject to double regulation, legal and contractual. The Act of 11 February 1920 relating to journalists, to start with, granted them conditions which their colleagues in many countries could envy. Section 3 of the Act, in fact, provided t h a t a journalist's holidays should amount to at least one month in the year, and to at least one and a half months after ten years' service with the paper. The Organisation of the Viennese Press succeeded in improving these conditions still further by means of the collective agreement of March 1923. A small change was introduced which is of great practical importance. Under the terms of the agreement, the ten years of service which give the right to one and a half months' leave are not to be taken as continuous service in the same undertaking, but relate to the entire journalistic activity of the employee, even if it is accomplished in several successive posts (Article 17). Furthermore, a journalist employed on night work is entitled to an additional week's leave in the year. According to the provisions of the agreement, it is forbidden to substitute a pecuniary allowance for leave, except in respect of night workers whose additional leave of one week may be replaced — 121 — by an indemnity, when the employees concerned have already taken their fortnight's leave, and exceptional circumstances require it (Article 17). I n case of illness, every journalist who has accomplished five years' service in the same undertaking is entitled to four months' leave with full pay, and an additional month on the same conditions for each year of service above five, up to a maximum of twelve months (Article 17, § 8). The annual leave of Belgian journalists sometimes amounts to four weeks. There are, however, many who do not even have a fortnight's leave a year. There is no law dealing with the question. I n Brazil, on 30 October 1926, an Act came into force granting all manual and non-manual workers a fortnight's leave in the year after one year's service in the same undertaking. The Act, which applies to journalists as well as to industrial workers, was strongly opposed in certain employers' circles, which insistently demanded its repeal ; but in view of the attitude of all the labourers' and employees' organisations, it is probable t h a t it will be maintained in force. Bulgarian journalists generally obtain one month's leave in the year. This custom is not sanctioned by any law. I n Czechoslovakia, the Hungarian Press Act of 1914 in force in Slovakia and in Ruthenia contains no provision concerning holidays. I t is the general Act of 1925 relating to the working conditions of employees t h a t is applicable to journalists in these regions. The Act declares t h a t six days' annual leave shall be granted after one year's service, seven days after ten years, and eight days after fifteen years. The Austrian Act of 1910, which is in force in Bohemia, and which is applicable to journalists, assures employees of more favourable conditions. By the terms of this Act, annual leave amounts to one week after six months' service, two weeks after five years' service, and three weeks after fifteen years' service. I n practice, leave granted to journalists is much longer. After two or three years' service, it is not rare for them to obtain one month's leave and even more. The collective agreement of the — 122 — Prager Presse stipulates t h a t one month's leave shall be given after one year's service in the case of day workers, and five weeks in the case of night workers. For particularly urgent work, the journalist receives in exchange for his right to holidays an indemnity equal to his salary ; but this practice, to which the organisations of journalists are opposed, tends to disappear. I t is customary in France to give journalists paid holidays which range from two weeks to one month annually. The matter is not dealt with in regulations ; nor is t h a t of sick leave, which for the moment is left to the discretion of the directors — influenced by usage nevertheless. Thus journalists suffering from illness generally continue t o receive their pay during a number of months t h a t varies with the resources of the paper and the goodwill of its director, as well as with t h e professional and personal situation of the employee. I n an important paper sick leave may extend to four, five, and even six months. I n Germany the system of paid annual leave, although not sanctioned by any law, is very common in journalism. For many years it has formed the subject of special stipulations in the regional collective agreements. For example, the agreements of November 1924 for Central Germany and for the Bavarian Press assured journalists of a fortnight's holiday after one year's service and three weeks' holiday after three years \ Since the signature of the national collective agreement in 1926, the question of holidays has been dealt with in a uniform way throughout German territory. I n virtue of Article I X of the agreement, every journalist is entitled to annual leave of two weeks after six months' service, three weeks during the second and third years, and four weeks thereafter. If it is not possible to replace a journalist by his colleagues because a newspaper only employs one journalist, the period of leave must nevertheless be at least two weeks. I t should be observed t h a t the periods fixed by the agreement are only minimum periods, and they are often exceeded in practice. The contract of the National Association of the German Press contains no clause respecting sick leave, but, on the other hand, 1 The latter contract even established the obligation on the part of the paper t o grant its writers a fortnight's holiday after every period of imprisonment served for offences against the Press legislation. — 123 — the agreement concluded by the Union of the Labour Press declares t h a t a journalist is entitled to three months' paid sick leave. Although the system of annual leave is fairly general in Great Britain in the journalistic world, it is sanctioned only by the agreement of March 1921, whose application is limited to the big London papers. This agreement lays down t h a t the members of the editorial staff shall be entitled to at least three weeks' leave, to be taken between 1 May and 31 October, in addition to two days' leave for Christmas and one day for Good Friday. As regards the sporting and financial papers, the agreement adds t h a t the time for leave is to be fixed by common accord between the management and the staff. I n the provinces where no regulations are applicable, leave amounts to a fortnight, on an average. I t only rises to three weeks or a month in rare cases. Hence, in spite of the established custom of ceasing work on certain general holidays and of interrupting the publication of the paper on these occasions for one or two days, as is done nearly everywhere at Christmas, the English journalists are in this respect among the least favoured of the members of the profession who have the advantage of collective contracts. They ardently desire an improvement in this state of affairs. The Hungarian Press Act of 1924 contains no clause on holidays, but it is customary to give journalists one month's annual leave. Sick leave also is only subject to custom. The collective agreement of Italian journalists prescribes t h a t every journalist in receipt of fixed payment, even if he has been engaged by special contract, is entitled to one month's leave a year, to be taken preferably from June to October, according to the requirements of the service (Article 14). I n case of illness, a journalist is entitled to three months' leave with full pay, and three months with half pay. The Act of 31 October 1919 on the working conditions of employees assures Luxemburg journalists of a paid holiday of ten days after three years' service, and of twenty days after five years (section 6). The holidays granted to journalists are generally longer than those to which they are entitled under the terms of the Act. As regards sick leave, the Act of 1919 lays down • — 124 — t h a t the post of an employee who has fallen ill shall be reserved for him for three months with full pay. The Luxemburg employers make no difficulty about granting the requisite leave. In the Netherlands there are no legal provisions concerning journalists' holidays, but it may be said t h a t the custom of granting two or three weeks' paid holiday is universal in the profession. I n Poland the Bill at present before the Diet provides t h a t every permanent journalist shall be entitled to one month's leave after one year's service. After ten years' service the period of leave shall be six weeks, and journalists on the night staff shall be entitled to two weeks' additional leave. Pending approval of this Bill, holidays are fixed by collective agreements. The agreement established by the Association of Warsaw Journalists and the Warsaw publishing compames provides for conditions in conformity with those of the Bill. I t is specified t h a t the date of the annual leave shall be fixed by the editor, and t h a t absence on account of military service or illness shall not count as annual leave. There is no regulation of the annual leave of journalists in Portugal. The custom is established of granting ten days a year to reporters, fifteen to twenty days to ordinary journalists, and thirty days t o editors and, in general, t o all persons having a certain amount of responsibility. There are no legal regulations in Rumania on the subject of holidays, but the collective agreement of the minority Press of •Transylvania establishes the right of all journalists to four weeks' paid leave a year. In the rest of the country only usages are in existence. Generally speaking, journalists get three to four weeks' leave a year. I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom the Decree of 25 September 1926 prescribes t h a t every journalist employed for more than a year in the same office is entitled to one month's annual leave. After ten years' service in the same undertaking the leave is increased to one and a half months (section 3). — 125 — In the case of illness, duly confirmed, the journalist is entitled to three months' leave with full pay, and three months with half pay. During the illness or the leave of the journalist, his colleagues on the editorial staff must do his work without special indemnity (section 18). In Spain there are no regulations. The custom is, however, to grant two weeks' leave to journalists. I t is also usual to grant paid sick leave, but as there are no regulations in existence, its duration is left to circumstances. In Sweden the holidays fixed by the model contract recommended by the Association of Publishers and the Federation of the Press are of one month. Also by the terms of the contract, every journalist is entitled, in case of illness, to one month's leave with full pay, and two months with two-thirds pay. In Swiss journalism, the agreement of 1923 on the conditions of employment lays down that annual leave must be at least of two weeks for a journalist employed on a paper appearing six times a week, and of three weeks in all other cases. The replacement of a journalist on leave is a matter for the publishing house. I n the United States the journalists, as a rule, are in the enjoyment of annual leave, but its duration is subject to infinite variation according to the paper and to the job. Although the system of leave is common enough, it is rare t h a t the general holidays are observed in journalism. In the U.S.S.R. the Labour Code (section 114) lays down as a general rule that every wage earner shall be entitled to two weeks' annual leave without any reduction in his wages. I t will be evident from this short survey t h a t the principle of holidays is usually admitted in journalism in the various countries. Custom has extended its application ; collective agreements and legislation have sanctioned it. There is no cause for astonishment in the fairly satisfactory state of affairs in this matter ; — 126 — journalists enjoy the privilege which has always belonged to brain workers. In fact it must be observed t h a t in the countries in which they come within the scope of an Act on employees, or even on manual workers, as is the case in the U.S.S.R., their theoretical situation (the word "theoretical" must be insisted upon, because it is very probable t h a t in practice they are often treated more generously than the law requires) is inferior to t h a t which is established elsewhere by mere custom. This privilege is, however, reduced by the administrative and industrial character of the modern newspaper, and if journalists are better treated than manual workers and employees as regards holidays, they are less well treated in this respect than certain other paid intellectual workers, professors, for example. Custom has done much for journalists' holidays ; collective agreements have done more. They have given to newspaper workers all t h a t security which precise regulations afford, and, in a general way, have increased the length of holidays granted. The International Federation of Journalists, in drawing u p its draft model agreement in 1927, thought fit to incorporate in it the principle of holidays which is found in all the national agreements. The model agreement states : Every journalist after one year's service in the undertaking, or after t e n years' work in the profession, is entitled to one month's leave a year. After ten years in the same undertaking the journalist is entitled to one and a half months' leave. Leave must normally be taken during the months of July, August, and September ; the choice of dates between these limits is left to journalists in the order of their seniority in the undertaking. Leave may not be taken a t another time of the year except in virtue of a special agreement. The stipulated period of a month is one of the longest to be found anywhere. I t is the period fixed by the principal collective agreements and by the Yugoslav law. The International Federation of Journalists insisted on introducing into this provision the principle which it has at heart, namely, the principle of the rights conferred by previous professional activity, which is found in t h e provisions of the Austrian agreements relating to leave. The right to a period of leave is acquired in the draft of the International Federation of Journalists, not only after one year's service, but immediately, if the journalist has ten years of professional activity in other undertakings to his credit. Even with this improvement, the model agreement of t h e International Federation of Journalists remains inferior to t h e - 127 — Austrian agreement — the most favourable of all — which grants immediately to all journalists with ten years' activity to their credit the holiday of a month and a half which the project of the International Federation gives only after ten years' service in the same undertaking. I n this we may note the concern of the International Federation to propose intermediate solutions applicable in a great number of countries, without seeking to secure at one stroke the most favourable conditions obtained by countries in the vanguard of journalistic organisation. The International Federation has incorporated in its draft agreement one clause which is found in only one national agreement ; the Italian. I t relates to the facilities which a journalist should have of taking his holidays at the best time of the year. SALARIES I t is in the domain of salaries that the difficulty which journalism in many countries has experienced, and is still experiencing, made itself most felt. For a long time all the efforts of journalists' organisations had to be employed in remedying this situation, and in many countries it is still the principal, if not the only, subject of the preoccupations of the members of the profession. I t is very difficult to obtain precise information with regard to the salaries of journalists in the various countries. As with regard to hours of work, so with regard to salaries, the greatest diversity reigns. Everything depends on the nature of the post and the aptitudes of the journalist ; salaries varying by 100 per cent, can frequently be found in the same class of work. To the difficulties of distinguishing the categories of posts, of comparing functions which are often widely different as regards the task imposed, the hours of work and the responsibilities incurred, is added the purely material difficulty of obtaining information relating to the amount of individual salaries. These difficulties are attenuated in the countries in which salaries have been fixed by collective agreements, though these agreements indicate only minimum salaries, and it is not easy to discover to what extent the salaries paid differ from the minima. To the extent t h a t the information received allows, the figures. between which the salaries paid to the two or three principal categories of journalists fluctuate will be indicated in the following pages, with a mention, for the sake of comparison, of the wages of skilled printers, and in the absence of statistics concerning — 128 — them, the wages of the manual workers of another industry \ The rates of pay for overtime work will also be given as far as possible, and especially the rates for Sunday work. An attempt will be made, in addition, to indicate the changes which the salaries of journalists have undergone since 1914 in relation to the cost of living, and to draw attention to the advantages which journalists have been able to obtain to compensate for the possible insufficiency of their emoluments (railway tickets at reduced prices, rebates on the cost of books necessary for their work, etc.). . I t is evident that, in addition to the expenditure on clothes which journalists must often incur on account of the profession itself (which obliges them to maintain a certain standard of appearance), the purchase of books and periodicals required for the purpose of keeping au courant with events, threatens to become a heavy charge. Happily some undertakings do not hesitate to allow large sums for the constitution of libraries, which are also supplied by means of free and exchange copies. Further, the associations of journalists endeavour to constitute libraries for the use of their members. These few advantages do not alter the fact t h a t salaries are so low in certain countries t h a t journalists are sometimes obliged to engage in accessory occupations, or even to consider journalism as a spare-time profession which only serves to complete the larger income t h a t they derive from other sources. There are many, too, who are compelled to work for several papers, none of which pays them a living wage. This situation is not without serious disadvantages as much from the point of view of the labour market, as from the point of view of retiring pensions where these are in question. 1 An important observation must be made on the subject of this comparison. The wages of the manual workers for which figures are given should be interpreted with prudence ; they are not fully comparable with those of journalists. They are calculated for the most p a r t from the time rates fixed by the collective agreements. Established on the base of the forty-eight hour week, they do not exactly represent the earnings of a workman who quite possibly does not work regularly •during the whole of the 192 hours which are theoretically assigned to his month. These approximate wages are only indicated to allow the reader to obtain a n idea of the real value of the emoluments of journalists, expressed in national currencies which differ greatly one from another. These emoluments would be liable, without this comparison, to be without any significance. I n consequence, no a t t e m p t is made to justify unfavourable judgments on one or other category of workers b y these figures. I t must be remembered t h a t for countries in which the wages of manual workers show a large increase on the pre-war figures, the latter were often very low, and their subsequent rise is not a t all disproportionate to the rise in the cost of living. Rather is the contrary t r u e . The rise in wages, moreover, was the result of continuous efforts on the p a r t of the manual workers associated in strong professional organisations. — 129 — I t is important to state clearly a t this point what will and what will not be found in this section on salaries. There will be found data, varying in amplitude for different countries, but allowing an approximate idea to be gained of the evolution of the salaries of journalists in the course of the last few years in a given country, and their value in comparison with the salaries of certain other intellectual or manual professions. There will not be found anything which enables a comparison to be made between the salaries of journalists in different countries. For each country salaries are given in the national currency ; there is no indication of the cost of living which it would have been necessary to establish to determine rates of real salaries on a basis which would permit of international comparison. The only comparison of an international kind which is possible from the information given here relates to the more or less rapid and substantial progress accomplished here and there. I t would, however, be impossible to discover in the following date the elements for an international comparison of the level of existence of journalists \ The salaries of Australian journalists have for many years been fixed b y agreement. As early as 1914 an agreement was in existence which fixed the salaries of the various professional grades in the morning and evening papers of five important towns. At the present time the two agreements in force determine in great detail the salaries of all categories of metropolitan and provincial journalists, from the editor to photographers and beginners. Linage rates are also minutely regulated for the various groups of outside contributors. Below are given the minimum weekly rates for ordinary journalists fixed by the agreement of 1924, which is still in force, and covers the metropolitan dailies of New South Wales and Victoria. The division of journalists into three categories, according to their experience and ability, should be noted. Seniors Ordinary journalists (generals).. Juniors Morning papers £ s. d. 10 12 6 9 5 0 6 12 6 Evening papers £ s. d. 10 0 0 8 12 0 5 19 0 1 Annexed to the present survey (p. 215) will be found, however, an approxim a t e table showing the purchasing power of various national currencies with regard to a number of foodstuffs. The table will allow a comparison of this kind to be drawn in a very rough way. 9 — 130 — I n other States these rates are reduced by 5 to 20 per cent. I n order to prevent certain publishers from seeking to diminish the salaries of their staffs by giving too many posts to juniors, the agreement provides t h a t three-fifths of the journalists shall be seniors, not more t h a n one-fifth juniors, and the rest ordinary journalists (generals). Beginners (cadets) (they are so called during the first three years of service) are paid as follows : First year Second year Third year £1 2 3 10 15 15 0 per week 0 „ „ 0 „ Linage work is paid at 2%d. or 3d. a line if it is done by the regular staff of the paper, and at 2d. or 2%d. if it is done by outside contributors. The outside contributors are paid every fortnight. Journalists who do photographs receive at least 5s. for each negative ; all the materials necessary for taking and developing photographs are provided by the proprietors. Expenses incurred on duty, either locally or in travelling, are refunded by the paper. Parliamentary reporters receive refreshment expenses for meals which they have to take away from home. All these rates have been slightly changed since 1924 in consequence of fluctuations in the cost of living. I n this connection an interesting clause of the 1924 agreement provides t h a t every year, at the end of November, the index number of the cost of living, published by the Federal Statistician, shall be ascertained. Whenever the changes in the index number amount to 11 points, the basic rates fixed by the agreement must be increased or decreased in accordance with a detailed scale annexed to the agreement. I n 1926 the salaries of journalists had been changed to the following : Seniors Ordinary journalists (generals). . Juniors Morning papers £ s. d. 10 16 5 9 9 0 6 16 6 Evening papers £ s. d. 10 4 0 8 16 0 6 3 0 The weekly wages of a hand compositor were then £6 2s. and of a machine compositor £6 15s. The curve described by salaries since 1914 has been similar to the cost-of-living curve. While slightly unfavourable for the seniors, it has been favourable for the juniors and the ordinary journalists, as may be seen by compar- — 131 — ing the salary rates fixed by the agreement of 1914 which, as regards Melbourne, were as follows : Seniors Ordinary journalists (generals). . Juniors '. Morning papers £ s. d. 7 0 0 5 10 0 4 0 0 Evening papers £ s. d. 6 0 0 5 0 0 3 10 0 From the 1926 figures quoted above, it will be seen t h a t the increase was 54.6 per cent, as regards seniors, 71.8 per cent, as regards ordinary journalists and 70.6 per cent, as regards juniors. The cost-of-living index number fluctuated between 158 and 162 in 1926. The increase had therefore been about 5 per cent, lower for the seniors, and 10 per cent, higher for the juniors than the increase in the cost of living. On the whole, noteworthy results have been obtained by the Australian journalists as far as salaries are concerned ; thanks to their collective agreement, they have been able to keep remuneration abreast of the cost of living. I n Austria, there are special provisions relating to salaries in the Act of 1921 on journalists and in the collective agreement of the Viennese Press. The agreement contains detailed clauses on the various kinds of remuneration — fixed salaries, payments by the line and by the article, on occupational expenses and the date of payment. I t provides t h a t every person who has been regularly employed at a fixed salary in an editorial office for one year shall be entitled t o the minimum salary specified in an appendix to the collective agreement. Every journalist employed on a daily paper, or even on a weekly or a monthly organ is paid a fixed salary. The collective , agreement of the Viennese Press fixes a minimum monthly salary as follows, for journalists employed on daily papers : Employed on papers appearing twice a day or on papers appearing once a day, in the morning Employed on papers appearing once a day, a t noon or in the evening 450 schillings 365 „ 1 The salary of an editorial stenographer is as follows : Employed on papers appearing twice a day or papers appearing once a day, in the morning 353 schillings Employed on papers appearing once a day, a t noon or in the evening 240 1 p . 15. „ For the definition of editorial stenographer, cf. "The Training of Journalists", — 132 — After five years' service editorial stenographers are entitled to the salary of a journalist. These rates, which are only minima, are, in practice, considerably exceeded, and it is not rare to find journalists of Vienna in receipt of a monthly salary of 800 to 900 schillings. I t frequently happens t h a t a journalist obtains special fees for articles which he writes in addition to doing his ordinary work. Two methods of payment are then available ; the journalist receives either a lump sum once a month for his articles, or special payment for each of them. The special payment is, under the terms of the collective agreement, equal to t h a t of the outside collaborators (see below). I n the weekly papers appearing on Mondays which have adhered to the collective agreement of 1923 the minimum salary is equal to one-third of t h a t applicable to the morning dailies. I t is not fixed at one-seventh of this minimum because a part of the editorial work of the Monday papers is done on Sunday and another part is done during the week. The hours worked on a rest day are paid at twice the ordinary rates. A special allowance for night work is also provided for. Besides the permanent journalists with fixed salaries, there are some regular collaborators who are paid by the job. They receive a fee for every article required of them, even if the article is not subsequently printed in the paper, and they must be paid for every enquiry with which they are entrusted, although, for reasons beyond their control, some enquiries may not be brought to a conclusion. The terms fixed by the collective agreement for the remuneration of these collaborators vary from 10 to 12 schillings an article, and " from 500 to 1,000 crowns a line. Leading articles, literary articles and accounts of theatrical or artistic events must not be paid by the line, but by the article. In order to render competition impossible between the professional and the casual outside contributor, the " copy " furnished by the latter must be paid at the same rates as those applicable to the regular collaborators. An important clause of the collective agreement requires t h a t collaborators paid by the article or by the line shall be in receipt of a monthly salary at least equal to the minimum salary of the permanent journalists, even if the total sum actually due to them for articles supplied does not attain t o this minimum. I t is thus to the advantage of publishers to furnish their staffs with adequate — 133 — work, and the latter are assured of a living although, for one reason or another, the paper may not provide them with sufficient employment. When a journalist or a regular collaborator incurs expenditure in performing his duties he receives either a monthly indemnity in a lump sum, the amount of which is determined in agreement with the management, or the refund of his expenses, if they are occasional outlays, and are not continuously incurred from the beginning t o the end of the month. Furthermore, when a journalist or a collaborator is sent abroad he is paid, in addition to his ordinary salary, allowances calculated on the basis of the cost of living in the country to which he is going. These provisions taken together make the Austrian journalist one the most privileged members of the profession as far as salaries are concerned. His colleagues in many countries could envy the amount of his monthly salary. And the advantages which he has managed to obtain do not stop there. Under the terms of the collective agreement (Article 27) every journalist receives on 15 December a s a " Christmas Box " a sum equal to his emoluments for the month, and on the occasion of his annual holidays he receives a similar sum. I n other words, he receives fourteen months' salary in the year. For the purpose of calculating the emoluments of these supplementary months, account is taken not only of the monthly salary proper but also of the sums agreed upon for the remuneration of special articles and for the refund of out-ofpocket expenses. To the holiday gratuity must further be added a railway allowance which the journalist gets at the beginning of his holidays and which amounts to 12 per cent, of the total earnings for the month in the case of newspapers having an agreement with the railway companies by which they are granted a reduction of 50 per cent, on passenger fares, and 18 per cent, in the case of other papers. The regular collaborators paid by the article or by the line enjoy the same gratuities a t Christmas and at holiday time and the same travelling allowances as the journalists in receipt of fixed salaries. The gratuities for the supplementary months are calculated from the average earnings of the preceding six months. Finally, to all these advantages must be added the so-called rent allowance, a kind of lodging allowance, payable quarterly, and whose amount is fixed by agreement between the publisher and the journalist. — 134 — During the first years after the war Belgian journalism passed through troubled times. Nothing is more significant in this connection than the resolution passed in July 1920 by the Federal Congress of the Belgian Press demanding t h a t the wage of a good printer's hand should be taken as the basis for journalists' salaries. At the beginning of 1921, when the index number of the cost of living fluctuated between 385 and 410 (1914 = 100) salaries in journalism were practically at the pre-war level. They varied between 150 and 500 francs, and, in the Flemish Press, the publishers paid certain members of their staffs commencing salaries of 75 francs a month. The journalists of the capital were better treated t h a n those in the provinces ; some papers, notably the Socialist organs, had granted substantial increases, but the general position was lamentable. I n an important Brussels paper an employee of long standing was paid a salary of 11.50 francs a day, whereas a printer earned at least 17.50 francs 1. The journalists associated in the Professional Union of the Belgian Press thereupon undertook an active campaign for the improvement of their economic situation. Negotiations were opened with the newspaper directors, who, for the most part, recognised t h a t their staffs deserved better t r e a t m e n t 2 . They agreed that the considerable increase in the cost of paper and ink could not continue to be invoked to justify small salaries leaving the members of their staffs in veritable distress, especially as the wages of printers had been raised, thanks to the collective agreement and to the establishment of sliding scales. Promises were made, and a certain number of papers carried them out. The Professional Union of the Belgian Press drew up a scale which allowed a minimum of 600 francs to beginners and 750 francs to employees with two years' service ; these rates were adopted here and there. The Belgian Federation of Directors of Provincial Newspapers, at the instance of the Professionnal Union, established a scale providing minimum rates of 400 to 700 francs. About fifteen newspapers at Antwerp, Ghent, Liege, and Charleroi accepted the scale. There was no change in the situation in 1922, apart from one piece of good fortune for journalists : two Brussels newspapers 1 Le Journaliste, Bulletin of the Professional Groups of the Belgian Press, March 1921. 2 Certain directors, however, refused to come to any agreement ; some even considered as contrary to professional dignity the form, prudent though it was, of t h e proceedings of t h e Professional Union, which was desirous of avoiding t h e least suspicion of " t r a d e unionism". — 135 — adopted the thirteen-month system which had been inaugurated in December 1919 by an Antwerp newspaper, subsequently adapted to certain English and French papers, and generahsed and standardised in Austrian and Italian journalism. In spite of some few increases granted since 1921, salaries in 1923 were far from corre ponding to the cost of living, and the economic situation of the Belgian journalists continued to be deplorable. The Professional Union insisted on fresh negotiations with the directors, feeling certain t h a t the latter could not remain indifferent to the unhappy lot of their staffs. " There is not one ", it wrote, " who would assert t h a t with the index number a t 420 in Brussels and 390 elsewhere in Belgium, it would be possible for the editorial staffs to live decently and to support their families on salaries amounting to less than 250 per cent, of the 1914 figures " \ Friendly representations were multiplied. Many times they succeeded in bettering the position of individuals, but they were not able to bring about general measures for the improvement of salaries. The Socialist journalists, in close touch with their directors, and in full agreement with them in principle as regards trade union policy and questions of salaries, had the benefit throughout this difficult period of a salary scheme much more coherent and supple t h a n those of their colleagues in other papers. In 1923, the Association of Socialist Journalists established a scale similar to the one drawn up by the Professional Union in 1921, but it had the advantage of being adopted by the whole of the Socialist Press. This scale fixed the salary of a beginner at 600 francs, and of a journalist of three years' standing at 750 francs. I t also provided for six annual increments of 500 francs, which brought the journalist's salary to 1,000 francs a month from the seventh year. Six optional increments, also of 500 francs, carried the remuneration of a capable writer with initiative to 15,000 francs. This maximum was later increased to 17,000 francs in the Socialist Press. The scale thus fixed was valid for a cost-of-living index number between 250 and 400. As soon as the index number rose above 400, a cost-of-living allowance was added to all salaries at the rate of 15 francs a month for every rise of ten point. The Congress of Socialist Journalists held at Charleroi in May 1926 demanded t h a t this monthly allowance should be increased from 15 to 25 francs. 1 Le Journaliste, Aug. 1923. — 136 — The conditions of Belgian journalism, as a whole, at the end of 1925 were subject to great variety ; while certain newspapers in Flanders paid salaries of 500 to 600 francs to their staffs, a newspaper in the capital was cited as paying its writers a commencing salary of 800 francs a month, as granting regular increments and a cost-of-living allowance, and paying a departmental chief 40,000 francs a year. I t appears t h a t the salary most frequently allowed to an experienced journalist was 700 to 800 francs a month. I t is interesting to compare these figures with the wages of a hand compositor who at this time was earning 764 francs a month, while a machine compositor was paid 812 francs. The comparison shows that most of the editorial staff were no better paid than workers in the printing trade. The Professional Union of the Belgian Press continued t o conduct a vigorous campaign for the improvement of salaries. I t endeavoured to obtain sliding scales for cost-of-living, lodging and family allowances. The General Press Association, for its part, had obtained certain benefits which made the economic position of journalists a little easier, for example, 45 per cent. reduction in the cost of railway travelling, and a certain reduction in telephone and telegraph rates. I n spite of these privileges, numerous journalists had to look to other work for a supplementary income. This was particularly true of Flanders, where journalists were known to make up the deficiency in their incomes by playing in theatre, cinema, or dance orchestras. At last, in December 1926, the Professional Union of the Belgian Press determined to send a letter to all the newspaper directors in the country drawing their attention to " the difficult, not to say, impossible position in which most journalists find themselves owing to the constant rise in the cost of living ". I t observed t h a t the index number had risen from 520 at the end of 1925 to 730 (735 for Brussels), and t h a t pre-war salaries would have to be multiplied by 7 y2 to bring them abreast of the cost of living. I n point of fact, however, as far as the majority of the journalists were concerned, the coefficient was below 5. Hence, the Professional Union felt justified in adding t h a t " i n a certain commune in the Brussels district, the roadsweepers are paid wages ranging from 45 to 51 francs a day, although there are many journalists who are not earning as much " 1. 1 Le Peuple, Brussels, 19 Dec. 1926. — 137 — In Brazil, salaries, which are not fixed by any collective agreement, varied in 1926 from 400 to 1,000 milreis a month as regards journalists and reporters. An ordinary contributor was allowed 150 to 200 milreis. The salary of a manager ranged from 1,500 to 3,000 milreis. Generally speaking, salaries have trebled since 1914, while the index number of the cost of living has risen to 350. I n Bulgaria the remuneration of various classes of journalists towards the middle of 1925 was as follows : Manager or editor Journalist Regularly appointed contributor Reporter Translator Administrative secretary 6,000 3,500 2,500 2,500 1,500 3,000 to to to to to to 8,000 leva 5,000 3,000 4,000 2,500 4,000 I t should be noted for the sake of comparison t h a t a bricklayer's labourer was then earning 3,900 leva a month, and a builder's labourer, 1,800 leva. Railway travelling inside the country is free to journalists on duty, and reporting expenses are paid by the employer. I n Czechoslovakia the average salary of a journalist may be estimated at 2,000 crowns a month. The lowest salary is 1,000 crowns, and the highest, very rarely attained, is 10,000. These figures represent basic salaries and are generally increased by a lodging allowance (which may be as much as 20 per cent, of the fixed salary) and, when appropriate, a family allowance of from 100 to 200 crowns a month for each child supported. A journalist who is the father of one child thus earns about 2,500 crowns a month \ I t is instructive to compare this salary with the wages of a machine compositor which are approximately 1,200 crowns a month. The ratio between the salaries of journalists and the wages of printers has practically remained what it was before the war. In view of the cost of living, whose index number was 950 in January 1 The custom prevails in Czechoslovak offices of granting an additional month's salary as a Christmas box. Journalists are among the beneficiaries of this custom and it is not rare for a newspaper to pay fourteen or fifteen months' salary in the year. The collective agreement of the Prager Presse provides t h a t a month's salary shall be paid a t the end of each month and, further, on 15 March, 15 July, and 15 September. — 138 — 1926, the remuneration of journalists, which has, generally speaking, increased tenfold, is also approximately a t the 1914 level. Reporting expenses, both a t home and abroad, are paid by the paper. Journalists are granted a reduction of 50 per cent, and more on the price of railway tickets, and enjoy privileged rates on the tramway systems. On presentation of a certificate delivered by their employers, they receive a discount, not exceeding 25 per cent., from booksellers. Among the questions which most preoccupy French journalists must be included, together with the instability of the profession (which they would like to remedy by means of insurance funds and adequate indemnities on the termination of employment), the serious problem of salaries. The French journalists are not in a very happy position in this connection. Their lot has, it is true, improved a little thanks to the persevermg efforts of their professional organisations ; among the foremost of them is the Association of Journalists, which has already obtained some successes in this field. Towards the middle of 1925, the position as regards the remuneration of journalists was the following : I t was impossible to indicate even approximately the magnitude of the salary of an editor, as it might vary from 2,000 to 10,000 francs a month. A good sub-editor earned 1,200 to 2,500 francs ; more often than not his salary was 2,000 francs. The head of the news department earned 1,500 to 2,000 francs a month, and the other heads of departments were paid on the same scale. The ordinary contributors (for news concerning prefectures, academies, ministries, theatres, sports, etc.) were often paid low fees, sometimes as little as 200 francs a month, and never more than 1,000. They made a living wage by working for several papers. Reporters were paid 800 to 1,500 francs a month \ At t h a t time the wages of a hand compositor or a machine compositor amounted to 912 francs a month ; an unskilled workman earned 784 francs. A secondary schoolmaster was paid 1,250 1 The outside contributors and many journalists working in editorial offices, whom big papers continued to pay by the line, received 40 to 50 centimes in the summer of 1925 for a line of text, and about 100 francs for an article. — 139 — to 1,750 francs a month and an elementary master 1,060 francs. I t is well known t h a t these salaries in the teaching profession were not regarded as adequate, but it appears t h a t in most cases the salaries of journalists were lower still. Finally, if we examine the extent to which journalists' salaries had risen since 1914, it will be found t h a t the rise reached 100 to 150 per cent, at the middle of 1925, while the cost-of-living index number was 4 1 0 ( 1 9 1 4 = 100). That is to say, most of the salaries were worth only about half as much as before the war. The average salary of an ordinary journalist remained in the neighbourhood of 1,000 francs — but it was frequently less — until November 1926, when the Association of Journalists persuaded the Parisian directors, after numerous attempts, to agree t h a t the minimum monthly salary should be fixed at 1,200 francs for every journalist who had been attached for two years to the editorial staff of a newspaper and who was working full time. Two other demands of the Association, viz. an immediate increase of 25 per cent, on all salaries and the establishment of a sliding scale allowing of the automatic adjustment of salaries to the cost of living, were not accepted by the directors. Increases nevertheless took place in many papers, notably at Lille, where the Association of Journalists has a very alert and active branch. They are far, however, from bringing the salaries, which vary from 1,200 t o 1,500 francs, t o the level of the cost of living. On an average, on the basis of the 1914 figures, the salary coefficient fluctuates between 2.5 and 3, while the cost of living coefficient is more t h a n 5, in spite of the fall experienced since 1926. In July 1927, the epoch a t which the journalists' salaries h a d already reached their present level — a journalist's salary varying between 1,200 and 1,500 francs — a secondary school teacher was in receipt of 2,150 to 3,150 francs a month at Paris, and an elementary teacher 1,000 to 1,500, including various cost-of-living allowances. The monthly wages of a qualified printer amounted a t this time to 1,350 francs. I t will be seen from a comparison, as much with the salaries paid to their colleagues in other intellectual professions, as with the wages of workers in the printing trade, t h a t the material position of journalists is far from being what it was before the war. The fact t h a t a considerable part of the journalist's income must be devoted to his professional work makes the situation all the worse. I t is not easy to estimate the expenditure represented by the purchase of the books and magazines required by the — 140 — work, but it may be taken that for a specialist in foreign policy, or in economics, who has to read foreign newspapers, magazines and books, this expenditure may amount to several hundred francs a month. Reporting expenses, on the other hand, are refunded. I t even happens in some cases t h a t if the reporter is in receipt of a very inadequate salary, his expenses are generously assessed and he receives, not a mere refund, but what may be described as a tacit allowance for work done in difficult and tiring conditions. This rule, however, is not general, and some papers, on the contrary, keep a very tight control over travelling expenses. In the total absence of statistics relating to journalism it is not feasible to give an exact description of the curve described by salaries in Germany since 1914. At t h a t time there were no agreements, no schedules, and the salaries of journalists were fixed individually according to the resources of the paper, the thousand and one shades of difference in the nature of the work, the personality of the journalist, and other circumstances. After the war, however, the system of agreements governing rates of payment began to spread ; these agreements allow the evolution of salaries in recent years to be followed to a certain extent. An investigation of this kind no longer offers anything but retrospective interest. Nevertheless it may not be entirely without utility. Among other lessons which it conveys, it shows what services were rendered to German journalists by the principles of professional organisation which they set themselves to apply, and to what degree their associations enabled them to support the severe trials which awaited them. Thanks to these organisations, to the practical methods of realising their aims which they had adopted, to the administrative organs with which they were endowed, and to the agreements which they had been able to prepare with the publishers' associations, it was possible for German journalists to come to understandings with the publishers as the economic crisis developed, to settle with them the means of adapting themselves to the crisis, and to preserve the newspaper industry from complete disorganisation. If these efforts were at one time vain — when the crisis assumed catastrophic proportions — if the desire of maintaining order in the economics of journalism was frustrated, and a system which could no longer adapt itself to the extreme rapidity of events had to be dropped, at any rate, as soon as the paroxysm of the crisis had passed, the task could be begun again without delay, and the situation restored. — 141 — We know how much intellectual workers suffered during the great economic crisis in the countries which were hard hit. The manual workers with their robust organisations and their collective agreements were often seriously affected, but the sufferings of the unorganised intellectuals, abandoned to futile struggles and most frequently to the abnegation of isolation, were even more acute. In many countries the difference which existed before the crisis between the wages of the manual workers and the salaries of the intellectuals rapidly diminished in the course of the crisis ; it was often abolished, and sometimes even inverted. Whereas, however, manual workers, by means of their trade union activity, obtained adjustments of wages, very often the earnings of the intellectuals remained what they were before the war, and they were reduced to pitiable difficulties owing to the inexorable rise of the cost of living. German journalists, thanks to the precautions taken by the professional organisation, succeeded for some time in standing firm in the crisis, as is well shown by the following examples, which, without claiming to give a complete picture of the situation, indicate its general character clearly enough. (It was naturally not possible to take account of all t h e circumstances and all the facts ; it is hardly necessary to mention t h a t there were exceptions and contradictory details.) The agreement for rates of payment concluded in July 1920 by the Union of Newspaper Publishers and the Press Association of East Prussia fixed as follows the minimum monthly salary of a journalist after three years' service : A. In towns B . I n towns C. I n towns D . I n towns E . I n towns of of of of of less t h a n 5,000 inhabitants 5,000 to 15,000 inhabitants 15,000 to 25,000 inhabitants 25,000 to 100,000 inhabitants more t h a n 100,000 inhabitants Marks 600 700 800 900 1,000 At t h a t time a printer earned from 900 to 1,000 marks a month according to the district. As the economic conditions changed fairly rapidly, the East Prussian contract provided for the periodic adjustment of salaries. I n fulfilment of this provision it was decided by common accord in April 1921 to increase the salaries previously fixed by 30 per cent., and a further increase of 60 per cent, of the original salaries took effect in October 1921. By this last agreement, which was — 142 — concluded on 13 September 1921, it was furthermore decided t h a t a family allowance should be paid at the rate of 200 marks a month for one child, with a further 100 marks for each additional child u p to the age of sixteen years. At the moment at which the second of these increases took place the wages of a printer had risen from 1,000 marks to about 1,500 marks, an increase of 50 per cent. Thus, thanks to the adjustments effected according to the procedure provided for in the collective agreement, the salaries of journalists had increased by a percentage a little higher than t h a t for manual workers in the printing trade. Another example of adjustments of salaries is to be found in the agreement concluded in 1921 by the Bavarian Association of Publishers and the Federation of the Bavarian Press. On 9 J u n e 1921 a scale of salaries was fixed by these two organisations. I n this scale the towns of Bavaria were divided into four categories, and for each of these categories the monthly salary of a journalist having wide responsibilities, a qualified journalist, an assistant journalist, and a reporter were fixed. On 28 September" of the same year a supplementary agreement was concluded by which salaries were increased by 25 per cent, and 30 per cent, according to the locality ; these increases were equivalent to those effected in E a s t Prussia. From this time the financial situation of the country became rapidly worse. Salaries could no longer keep pace with the rise in prices caused by the fall of the mark, and the agreement for rates of payment could not be maintained in force. A return was made to the pre-war system, the fixing of salaries on an individual basis. Times were very hard for journalists ; it happened in many regions t h a t their salaries descended below those of printers. As soon as the worst of the crisis was over, the system of salary scales was reverted to. In November 1924 the agreement established by the Press Federation of Central Germany fixed t h e basic rates of salaries payable to journalists, whether they had family charges or not, in five categories of towns, as well as t h e increments payable at the end of three and six years of service. Under these scales a journalist of average ability and having family charges earned, after three years' service, 330 marks a month in a large town and 210 marks in a small one. At the same time a hand compositor in the printing trade earned 180 marks, and a machine compositor 184 marks per month. — 143 — I t is therefore clear t h a t after the inflation and the re-establishment of the gold mark, the difference between the remuneration of journalists and t h a t of printers considerably increased. I n December 1925, in the large towns, the monthly salary of a good writer varied from 600 to 1,000 marks ; in the small and medium-sized towns it was only 200 to 500 marks, and the latter sum was hardly ever earned in the provinces by anyone but editors and managing directors. The monthly salary most frequently met with seems to have been 350 to 450 marks at the end of 1925, for a qualified writer. A hand compositor then earned 192 marks a month and a machine compositor 230 marks. These figures show t h a t the wages of a printer had remained almost stat onary since the end of 1924, while the salary of a journalist had greatly increased. I t was in fact almost double the wages of a printer. Journalists had on the whole succeeded in harmonising their earnings with the increase in the cost of living. At present the situation is as follows : The various agreements concluded in J a n u a r y 1926 by the National Association of the German Press and the Newspaper Industry Employers' Association do not quote any figures for salaries ; they restrict themselves to laying down the general principles which should govern their determination, leaving t h e determination itself to the district agreements for rates of payment. The rules of the Commission of Collaboration created by the two associations, state t h a t among the tasks of the Commission shall be the following. To supervise the establishment and the enforcement, in all districts of binding agreements relating to salaries based on the principle t h a t the emoluments of journalists and permanent contributors must correspond, to the extent allowed by the financial capacity of the publishers as governed by economic conditions, to the particular social rank, determined by his intellectual status, of the journalist or the permanent contributor ; To take steps which shall, in view of the differences in the district scales of payment, provide the bases for fixing the emoluments of journalists who, exclusively or mainly, work for a newspaper publishing house elsewhere than at its headquarters ; — 144 — To establish the guiding principles relative to journalistic and accessory work ; To institute an office for assessment and conciliation to provide for the contingency of the special district organs of the two bodies failing to come to an understanding. (Article 2, paragraphs 9, 10, 11, and 12.) The agreement on normal service, signed in January 1926, furthermore provides t h a t : A journalist must receive a fixed salary ; The emoluments agreed upon must be granted from the moment the agreement comes into force, if they are payable at the end of a fixed term ; and the monthly salary must be paid at the latest on the last day of the month. A journalist is entitled to the refund of out-of-pocket expenses occasioned by his employment. An agreement should be concluded as to the manner in which the refund is to be made. (Article 3, paragraphs 1, 2, 3, and 4.) I n this way all details concerning the amount of the salaries are left to the district agreements for rates of payment. The four agreements of this kind in force, those for the North-West German Press, the Westphalian Press, the Bavarian Press, and the Silesian Press, as a matter of fact, fixed the salaries of journalists according to their place of work and the category of their post. They were concluded or recast at different dates, and they fixed minimum rates as follows : I. The Westphalian scale, dated 1 September 1925, fixed rates starting from 360 marks a month for the lower category and for localities of the second rank, and rising to 410 marks for . journalists with three years' experience, and to 500 marks for special editors in important towns. I I . The Bavarian scale, revised on 1 J a n u a r y 1927, established monthly salaries ranging from 315 marks t o 515 marks, and even 575 marks at Munich. I I I . The Silesian scale, dated June 1927, fixed salaries ranging from 198 marks for a bachelor beginning in a small locality, to 528 marks in a large town for a journalist who had been in the profession for twelve years. IV. Finally, the North-West German scale, revised on 3 November 1927, provided minimum salaries ranging from 300 to — 145 — 400 marks a month for an unmarried writer (the preceding scale dated 6 November 1926 fixed the rates at 275 to 350 marks). The agreement concluded by the Union of the Labour Press and the newspapers of the Social-Democratic P a r t y fixed the salary of novices at 300 marks with annual increments of 15 marks and a maximum of 450 marks. These are minimum figures and in practice the average salary fluctuates between 400 and 600 marks a month. I n Berlin there is no agreement for rates of payment. However, by agreement between publishers the salary of a journalist may not be less than 440 marks a month. This figure also is largely exceeded in practice, and the salaries of the Berlin journalists are as a rule from 500 to 600 marks. I t follows from these figures t h a t the average salary of a qualified writer at the present time in Germany must be sought a little above the rates of the collective contracts, t h a t is to say, in the neighbourhood of 450 marks. At the end of 1927 the monthly wages of a hand compositor were 206 marks, and of a machine compositor 247.20 marks. The remuneration of the manual and brain workers of the newspaper has thus experienced a slight increase since 1925 (a clear indication of this is found in the changes in the rates mentioned in the North-West German agreement quoted above). The German journalists, however, are not fully satisfied. The increases quoted are only average figures, and it is evident t h a t many newspaper workers are in a very precarious position, far below the average. I n localities without agreements for rates of payment salaries are very low. The National Association of the German Press recalls t h a t one of the tasks of the Commission of Collaboration, created in conjunction with the Employers' Association, was to facilitate the conclusion of agreements for rates of payment which would establish salaries allowing of a suitable level of existence. Yet, it is no secret t h a t side by side with privileged salaries there are others paid to journalists which do not exceed 200 or 300 marks a month \ The National Association strongly desires t o take up the question of salaries again with the publishers, and to establish a regime more in harmony with present circumstances. 1 Die deutsche Presse, Organ des Reichsverbandes der deutschen Presse, 27 Aug. 1927, p . 469. 10 — 146 — I n Great Britain the salaries of journalists are fixed by the various collective agreements concluded by the National Union of Journalists. The agreements are applicable to four main groups of journalists : the London journalists and reporters, the provincial journalists and reporters, the journalists and reporters of the news agencies, and the photographers and photographic printers. To the London and provincial journalists must be added an intermediate group which is covered by a special agreement ; this group comprises the staffs of the London offices of the provincial papers. Lastly, in addition to the journalists in receipt of a fixed salary, the agreements deal with contributors paid by the line or by the article, for whom they fix the rates of payment. The minimum salaries of the London journalists are fixed by the collective agreement concluded in 1921 between the Newspaper Proprietors' Association and the National Union of Journalists. This agreement lays down in principle that no qualified reporter or sub-editor with three years' experience shall be employed, at a salary of less than nine guineas a week, except on sporting or financial papers, when the salary must be at least eight guineas a week, or on technical papers, when it must be eight guineas for a journalist doing responsible work and six guineas for an ordinary journalist or a reporter. The minimum salaries of provincial journalists are fixed by the agreement of 1921 between the Newspaper Society and the National Union of Journalists. I t applies to all the members of the union who have reached the age of twenty-three years and who have at least three years' experience. The minimum salaries are £4 7s. 6d. a week for London weeklies, £5 3s. Od. for dailies appearing in towns of less than 100,000 inhabitants, £5 8s. 6d. in towns of 100,000 to 250,000 inhabitants, and £5 15s. Od. in towns of more than 250,000 inhabitants. On 26 May 1924 a supplementary agreement modified this agreement by extending to four years the length of service entitling an employee to the salaries laid down, and raising the qualifying age for the full scale to twenty-four years. Up to the age of twenty-four years a young journalist was entitled, after one year's service, to a certain percentage of the full scale. The supplementary agreement fixed this percentage at 50 for journalists of twenty years of age, at 60 for those of twenty-one years, at 75 for those of twenty-two years, and at 85 for those of twenty-three years. A youth beginning his journalistic career was to receive 25 per cent, of the minimum salary established for persons of twenty-four years of age. — 147 — The members of the London staffs of provincial papers are in receipt of a minimum salary of seven guineas a week, which rises to eight guineas after two years' service. The salaries of photographers, those auxiliaries of the journalist, were fixed by the agreements of 1921 applying to the London journalists and by a special agreement concluded in 1922. They range from four guineas (for improvers) to eight guineas after four years' service in a photographic agency. The scale established by the Institute of Journalists has higher minima. They vary from £5 a week for fully qualified journalists working on the smaller papers, to £14 for journalists with ten years' service in the larger papers. The salary of a fully qualified journalist in a paper of average circulation is fixed at £8 a week after three years' service. Unfortunately this scale is not incorporated in any agreement at the present time as the publishers 1 associations have not accepted it. I t is not without interest to observe t h a t the rates in force in London in the general printing trade (higher rates are paid in newspaper printing offices) allow £4 9s. Od. a week to a hand compositor and £4 16s. Od. to a machine compositor 1 . I t is thus evident that the remuneration of a journalist or a reporter in London is double the wages of a printer 2, whereas in the small provincial towns the minimum salaries of journalists are very close to the earnings of the workers in the printing trade. I t may be said, speaking generally, that journalists' salaries have doubled since 1914. As the cost-of-living index number is only about 175 (1914 = 100), it is obvious t h a t in the course of the last twelve years English journalists have substantially improved their financial status. Notwithstanding this, they are not fully satisfied. For instance, the striking difference between the minimum salaries of the capital and those obtaining in the provinces gives rise to vigorous protests. During the twentieth Assembly of the National Union in April 1927, a resolution was adopted instructing the executive committee of the Union to take steps with a view to a readjustment of salaries in the most important journalistic centres in which the working conditions are at the present time similar to those of the capital. The injustice of clauses which, while allowing a minimum of nine guineas to the 1 Cf. International Labour Review, Vol. X V I I , No. i, April 1928, p. 589. On the assumption t h a t the wages indicated are not increased by overtime payments. 2 — 148 — capital, allow only £5 15s. Od. to Manchester, a journalistic centre of first class importance a t the present time, was pointed out. The collective agreements concluded by the Union of Journalists, as we have said, do not only deal with the salaries of journalists continuously employed in the offices of the paper, but they also fix the rate of remuneration of outside contributors. For example, an agreement of 31 August 1920 concluded by the Union of Journalists and the Newspaper Proprietors' Association provides t h a t any article sent in by an outside contributor shall be paid a t the following rates : u p to 60 words, a t least 2s. 6d. ; after the first 60 words, 2%d. for every eight words. These rates apply t o articles on general subjects, and do not concern financial or sporting news or other special matter. Another agreement, dated 21 April 1920, fixes the rates of payment for telegrams and telephone messages ; in accordance with this agreement telephone messages must be paid for as follows : 5s. up to 200 words, 7s. from 200 to 300 words, 9s. from 300 t o 400 words, and Is. 6d. for every additional 100 words. The telephone and telegraph charges are paid by the employers. The collective agreements also deal with work done a t other times t h a n the ordinary hours and the ordinary days of work. The agreement of March 1921 for the London dailies fixes payment for work done on Saturday afternoon and evening in getting out a newspaper which appears before 6 a.m. on Sunday a t two guineas. If the paper appears after 6 a.m., and the working day begins after Saturday midnight, the remuneration is increased to three guineas, about twice the amount allowed for a normal working day. The collective agreement concluded on 31 March 1922 between the National Union of Journalists and the Press Association, fixing the minimum salaries of reporters and journalists employed in news agencies, does not provide for any special rates of payment in respect of overtime work, whether it is done in the week or on Sunday, except in the case of parliamentary work done out of normal hours, when the rates of pay are slightly increased. Lastly, certain collective agreements provide for special allowances to cover reporting expenses. The agreement concluded in J u l y 1924 between the National Union of Journalists and the Association of Press Photographic Agencies stipulates t h a t the expenses incurred by reporters on duty in London shall be refunded. When the engagement makes it necessary for the operator to leave the capital, he is paid a special allowance of 25s. a day if he has — 149 — to spend a night out of town, and 12s. 6d. a day if he does not. For engagements abroad the amount of the special allowance must be agreed upon by the employee and the management. The collective agreement established in March 1922 by the National Union of Journalists and the Press Association, establishing regulations governing the work of the employees of the news agencies, also provides for a special allowance of 25s. a day for an out-of-town engagement which obliges the reporter to sleep away from home, and 12s. 6d. for a day-time engagement. Among the expenses which may be incumbent on journalists as the direct consequence of their profession, the purchase of books and periodicals sometimes entails considerable outlay. I t is true, however, t h a t certain papers make an effort to place libraries at the disposal of their staff. In Greece, in August 1927, the monthly salary of an ordinary journalist or of a reporter varied from 1,500 t o 3,000 drachmas, and t h a t of an editor from 4,000 to 10,000 drachmas ; an outside contributor was paid 100 to 150 drachmas for an article. Reporting expenses, and usually all out-of-pocket expenses, are borne by the paper, which also procures the books and periodicals required by the staff. In Hungary the monthly salaries of journalists vary from 400 to 600 pengo x, but there are some of less than 200. A journalist with large responsibüities sometimes earns 800, and in rare cases even as much as 1,000 or 1,200 pengo. In a certain number of undertakings special gratuities are added to these salaries. The most usual form for the gratuity to take is the payment of an additional month's salary at Christmas. One house in Budapest also allows a gratuity of a month's salary at the time for annual leave. We have already seen that in 1917 the Independent Organisation of Journalists concluded a collective agreement with the Association of Publishers, and t h a t it was denounced by the employers after the fall of the Communist regime. I n virtue of this agreement the salaries of journalists had been increased on the termination of the war by 25-30 per cent, on the 1914 figures. After the annulment of the agreement salaries did not keep up with the rise in prices due to the growing worthlessness of the 1 I n the spring of 1928, 100 pengo were worth 90 gold francs (£3 12s. Od.). — 150 — currency. The ratio between the remuneration of a journalist and the wages of the workers in the printing trade was altered to the advantage of the latter, and a t the present time the real salaries of journalists are still about 30 per cent, below the prewar standard. I t may again be of interest to indicate, for the purposes of comparison, the scales of pay for manual workers in the printing trade and for secondary-school teachers. The collective agreement establishing the rates of payment for printers fixes amounts varying from 40 to 99 pengo a week, or 160 to 396 pengo a month ; to these sums must be added payments for overtime work. The salaries of secondary-school masters range from 150 to 500 pengo a month ; in addition they receive a quarterly lodging allowance. The reporting expenses of journalists, whether incurred at home or abroad, are as a general rule met by the paper. On the other hand, the journalists do not enjoy any privileges as far as the purchase of books and periodicals is concerned. Only publishers of newspapers who are at the same time publishers of books allow their staffs a discount of 10 to 20 per cent, on the price of their publications. I n Italy, notwithstanding the existence of the collective agreement, salaries are not fixed for all journalists. The agreement does no more than establish the obligation to grant an allowance at the end of the year. This practice is known as the thirteenmonth system, and has already been met with in the Austrian contract. The Italian agreement also establishes the principles of quinquennial increments amounting to one month's salary (Article 15), and extra pay for the journalist engaged for day work who is transferred to night work. But it mentions no figures and leaves the actual salaries to be determined by the individual contracts. This is what happens in practice. Salaries of Italian journalists are fixed by means of unfettered negotiations, and are proportional to the financial means of the various undertakings. I t is therefore very difficult to ascertain the average salary, and conditions change with the paper and with the district. I n any case, however, a clear distinction must be made between Northern Italy as far as Rome, and Southern Italy ; salaries are much lower in the South than in the North. — 151 — If it is necessary to quote figures, 1,200 lire can be taken as an average monthly salary in the North and at Rome, and 800 lire as the average in the southern half of the peninsula. For the purposes of comparison it may be stated t h a t at the middle and at the end of 1927 a hand compositor at Rome earned 704 lire, and a machine compositor 820 lire a month. All journalists attached to the editorial offices of a newspaper are in receipt of a fixed salary. Only outside contributors are paid by the article or by the line. Provincial correspondents are paid by the line. Out-of-pocket expenses, reporting or others, are refunded as they are incurred, on the presentation of the vouchers. If travelling on duty involves visits of some length, newspapers grant a daily allowance in addition to refunding expenses. Although no effort has been made in the collective agreement to unify salaries and fix them definitely, the former Press Federation paid the greatest attention to the successive rises in the salary scale, and settled the principles applicable to them with the Union of Publishers. I t was decided to resort to regular additions corresponding to the rise in the cost-of-living index number as established by the Chamber of Commerce, and in consequence of this procedure the monthly salary of a journalist, which was 250 lire in 1914, rose to about 1,200 lire in 1927. The increase on the first figure is almost 400 per cent, and corresponds fairly well with the rise in the cost-of-living, the index number having mounted from 100 in 1914 to 540 in August 1927. The salary position revealed by these figures, on the whole a favourable one, explains to a certain extent why the need of fixing rates of salaries in the collective agreement has not made itself felt. Itahan journalists, however, who have gained and incorporated in their agreement such remarkable successes in other fields, would like to see the question of salaries settled in a similar manner, and are anxious t h a t the established customs should be sanctioned by the provisions of collective agreements. The resolutions adopted by the local syndicates often deal with this matter. A recent resolution of the Palermo syndicate 1 expressed the satisfaction of the Sicilian journalists on learning t h a t the directors of the National Syndicate were resolved " to p u t an end to the shameful spectacle still offered by certain under 1 Dated 30 March 1928 ; cf. Bolletino giornalisti, 30 Aprii 1928. del Sindacato nazionale fascista dei — 152 — takings in some of the southern districts " and hoped t h a t " this problem, which is bound up with the dignity and the prestige of the Sicilian journalists and which is, moreover, subordinated to the principles of the Labour Charter " would be solved in a fitting manner. I n Latvia the minimum salary of a journalist in November 1927 was 240 lats 1 , b u t this figure was often exceeded in practice. At this period a hand compositor earned 196 lats a month, and a machine compositor 270 lats. I n Luxemburg, in the three big dailies, the custom of making the salaries of journalists conform to those of the civil servants has become established. Difficulties are found, however, in equating the various categories of journalists and officials. As a general rule, journalists in these three papers who possess university degrees are paid at the same rates as secondary-school teachers. For one of the papers this equality is even fixed by contract. I n J u n e 1927 a secondary-school master with no children was paid a minimum of 2,080 francs a month, while in the papers referred to, a journalist without a university education received 1,000 to 1,300 francs. I n the smaller daily papers salaries are much less ; they are often as little as half of those just mentioned, and give rise to lively protests among the journalists' organisations. If these rates are compared with the wages of a skilled printer, which at t h a t time were in the neighbourhood of 1,300 francs a month, it will be realised t h a t only the editorial staffs of papers t h a t have granted their employees equality of treatment with the Government servants are in receipt of a salary adapted to the present economic conditions. Other salaries, although they have considerably increased since 1914, have not followed the ascending curve of the cost of living. The wages of the printing workers, protected by a powerful trade union, have hugged this curve much closer. Luxemburg reporters are seldom sent on long journeys, but when travelling is necessary, the expenses involved are amply covered by their paper. The purchase of periodicals and books does not represent a large outlay for the journalist as he can generally find all he wants in the editorial office. 1 One lat = 1 gold franc (9 3 / 4 d.). — 153 — I n the Netherlands a scale established by common accord between the Association of Journalists and newspaper publishers provides three classes of salaries for each of the three classes of districts into which the country is divided. These salaries varied from 100 to 450 florins a month in 1926, when a hand compositor earned 140 florins, a machine compositor 156 florins, and an unskilled worker in the printing trade 112 florins a month. The salaries of journalists have increased by 50 to 100 per cent. since 1914, and, taking one with the other, have followed the rise in the cost of living, the index number of which was 177 at the end of 1925. I n Poland the salary rates, at least in Warsaw, are fixed by the agreement concluded in June 1924 by the Association of Journalists and the publishing houses of the capital. By the terms of this agreement journalists with a certain amount of responsibility receive 600 zloty, and qualified assistants 400 zloty a month. If the salaries paid in May 1925 are compared with the wages t h a t printers were then earning, it will be noticed t h a t there was very little difference between them. Actually, a hand compositor earned 402 zloty, a machine compositor 560 zloty per month, and the difference was all t o the advantage of the printers in the provinces, where journalists are not so well paid as they are in the capital. Before the war the salary of a responsible journalist at Warsaw was 200 to 250 roubles, which on a gold basis is equal to 550 to 650 zloty. I n spite of the inflation of the cost of living, salaries of journalists have thus remained almost stationary, while those of the printers have doubled. The outside contributors of the Warsaw papers are paid by the line, according to rates fixed by their collective agreement, which prescribes t h a t the payment for a line of text must be at least half the selling price of the paper. I n a Portuguese paper a qualified journalist has a monthly salary of 300 t o 1,000 escudos 1. The higher sum is hardly reached by anyone b u t editors who, in a big paper, earn as much as 1,500 escudos. The earnings of a reporter vary from 200 to 500 escudos, while hand and machine compositors are paid 480 escudos a month. 1 The outside collaborators receive on an average 25 escudos per article- — 154 — From 1914 to 1925 the salaries of journalists increased by 2,000 per cent., with the exception, however, of editors, for whom the increase amounted to only 1,000 per cent. During the same period the index number of the cost of living rose by 3,700 per cent. I n Rumania journalists in regular employment receive a fixed Salary payable once a fortnight. Except in the Transylvanian Press there is no minimum salary recognised by newspaper publishers. I t may be said that, as a general rule, a responsible journalist in a big daily receives 10,000 to 15,000 lei a month, while a reporter gets barely 6,000 ; the editor of a big paper may get as much as 25,000 lei, but editors of political papers are not paid more than 8,000 to 10,000 lei. Comparisons are furnished by college professors who begin at 5,000 lei a month and rise to a maximum of 11,000 lei, university professors who receive a commencing salary of 7,000 lei, and printing trade workers who get 4,000 to 5,000 lei a month. If the cost of living is taken into account it will be seen t h a t salaries of journalists have fallen considerably since 1914. The wages of the printing workers are in quite a different position ; the printers, who are associated in a powerful trade union, fix the minimum salaries of the profession every three months, in agreement with the employers. The minority Press of Transylvania is in a special position as a result of its collective agreement, which includes a salary scale. By the terms of the agreement, monthly salaries as from 1 October 1925 were to be as follows : Beginners Ordinary journalists Journalists with seven years' experience 5,200 to 6,040 lei 8,500 lei 9,000 lei Married journalists receive a supplement of 750 lei a month, to which is added another supplement of 350 lei for each child supported. I t will be seen t h a t the rates do not differ greatly from those in force in the rest of the country. On the other hand, the Transylvanian agreement contains a clause which constitutes an important guarantee. In accordance with this clause the cost-of-living index number adopted by the publishers and by the printing workers' trade union is ascertained at the end of each quarter, and reductions or increases in salary proportional to the changes in the index number are effected. — 155 — I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom the important Decree of December 1926 does no more than make it compulsory to include the amount of the monthly salary among the three points which must be found in the individual contracts. I t does not prescribe any minimum rate, and leaves the actual salaries to be determined by individual agreements between publishers and journalists. Spanish journalists are unquestionably among the worst off of any as far as salaries are concerned. The efforts of the professional associations have not succeeded in achieving any standardisation of salaries and they are left to the discretion of employers. They have always been remarkably low, but their inadequacy has become more pronounced in consequence of the rise in the cost of living. At the end of 1926, while the price index number had risen by 90 per cent, from the 1914 level, the earnings of journalists, which were already poor before the war, had increased only by 30 per cent. At the present time, an editor gets 500 to 750 pesetas a month, b u t the salary of an ordinary journalist fluctuates between 200 and 300 pesetas. Some newspapers in the capital, it is true, allow 400 to 500 pesetas to an ordinary journalist, and 1,250 pesetas t o an editor, and one paper even allows its staff to share in the profits. B u t these are only isolated cases. I n July 1927 a reporter in Madrid earned on an average 175 pesetas a month, and there were many journalists who did not get as much as 150 pesetas 1. At this period a good compositor was paid at least 350 pesetas a month. The workers in the printing trade, however, are perfectly organised, and have collective agreements and wages scales which are strictly applied. All the figures relate to Madrid ; in the provinces, the situation is still more lamentable, and most of the newspaper men are obliged to practice another calling side by side with journalism, or even treat journalism as a spare-time profession and engage in a better paid one. Reporting expenses are often met by the journalists who, however, get reduced rates and even free tickets from the railway companies, through the intermediary of the newspaper. The papers spend very little on the purchase of books or periodicals. The journalists are obliged to procure, at their own expense, publications which the paper does not receive free or in exchange. 1 The remuneration of outside contributors varied between 10 and 75 pesetas per article. Most frequently it ranged from 20 to 50 pesetas. — 156 — I n Sweden the model contract elaborated by the Association of Newspaper Publishers and the Association of Journalists distinguishes seven classes of districts, and fixes for each of these classes, according t o the age of the employee, remuneration in respect of (a) night work, and generally speaking, work done in getting out the morning papers, and (b) day work in general and work done in getting out the evening papers. The following table indicates these minimum salaries, which in small papers are the normal salaries, but which are often considerably exceeded in the big dailies : Increment aftei Class of district Commencing salary (22 years of age) 3 years 6 years 9 years Minimum age 25 years 28 years 31 years Maximum Salary 4,500 4,100 700 600 900 800 900 800 7,000 6,300 4,300 3,900 600 500 850 800 850 800 6,600 6,000 ••••i; 4,100 3,700 600 500 800 750 800 750 6,300 5,700 '•••i; 3,900 3,600 500 400 800 700 800 700 6,000 5,400 3,700 3,400 500 400 750 650 750 650 5,700 5,100 3,600 3,200 400 400 700 600 700 600 5,400 4,800 3,400 3,100 400 300 650 550 650 550 5,100 4,500 H:••••i: •-i: •-i: ,...!• The minimum monthly salaries thus vary from 258 crowns in the case of a journalist twenty-two years of age in a small town, to 583 crowns in the case of a journalist thirty-one years of age employed on a morning paper in a big town. These figures may be compared with the wages of a hand compositor, who earns 242 crowns a month, and of a machine compositor, who earns 266 crowns. On the whole, the remuneration of journalists has risen since 1914 ; this may be said, perhaps, not only of the nominal salary but also of the real salary, t h a t is the salary adjusted to the rise — 157 — in the cost of living. In any case their percentage increase is at least equal to t h a t of the wages of printers over the same period. When a journalist is given reporting work away from home, he is entitled to an additional daily allowance t h a t varies between 20 and 30 crowns, excluding travelling expenses, which are chargeable to the employer. No scales of allowances have been fixed for reporting work done abroad. The expenditure t h a t journalists may incur on the purchase of books and periodicals necessary for their work varies considerably from one establishment to another. Certain papers leave all this expenditure to be borne by their staff, while others devote substantial sums to maintaining a library. In Switzerland, the agreement of 1919, relating to the salaries of journalists, concluded between the Swiss Association of Newspaper Publishers and the Press Association, fixes the minimum salaries for three classes of newspapers in each of three classes of districts. I t only applies to the German-Swiss Press ; it was to be completed by an agreement applying to French Switzerland, but this has not yet been signed. By the terms of this agreement the fixed salary of a journalist must be equal to the basic salary of 1 July 1915, increased by at least 30 per cent. In cases where the salary was reduced in consequence of the war, the basic figure must be t h a t in force on 1 July 1914. The salary thus obtained must not be less t h a n 415 francs a month for a paper appearing less than six times a week, 540 francs for a paper appearing at least six times a week or belonging to a town of medium size, and 665 francs for a paper in a large town. The classification established for rates of payment in the printing trade serves as a basis for the division of the districts into categories. The journalists' scales have so far remained unchanged. I t is interesting to compare them with the monthly wages of printers, which were, at the end of 1927, 435 francs for a hand compositor, and 520 francs for a machine compositor. Another agreement, signed in 1919 and relating t o independent journalists, stipulates t h a t the linage rates must correspond to the financial means of the paper, but in no case shall they be less than 8 centimes a line. For specially ordered articles the minimum rate is 12 centimes and it is doubled if the paper acquires the exclusive right to publish the article requested. I n the case of important articles necessitating uninterrupted work, payment — 158 — by the line may be replaced by payment by the day, and this must not be less than 25 francs. Lastly, a stipulation similar to one in the Austrian agreement lays down t h a t when an outside contributor is regularly employed by a paper, it shall guarantee him, for the second year of collaboration, emoluments amounting to three-quarters of those paid during the preceding year, even if the amounts actually due in payment for lines furnished do not attain to this sum. Reporting and other out-of-pocket expenses are refunded on the basis of expenditure actually incurred. The cost of purchasing books or periodicals necessary for professional work, is borne only by the outside collaborators ; the journalists attached to the paper are exempt. With regard t o the changes which salaries have undergone since 1914, it has already been shown that, in accordance with the agreement of 1919, they should produce a minimum increase of 30 per cent. The increase has often been greater and in the most favourable cases corresponds to the rise in the cost of living, the index number of which at present fluctuates about 160 (1914 = 100). I n no country is there such diversity in journalists' salaries as in the United States. Some are extremely high; one big paper does not hesitate to pay as much as $50,000 a year to a highly qualified writer. In the little towns, on the contrary, it is not rare to see salaries of $100 a month. I t may be said t h a t at the end of 1925 the most usual salary for a journalist was $200, while a hand compositor earned $172 and a machine compositor $180. I t is estimated t h a t since 1914 the salaries of journalists have increased by about 30 per cent. The cost-of-living index number having mounted from 100 to about 180, newspaper workers are far from being in such a good economic position as they were in 1914. On the whole, the newspapers defray the travelling and reporting expenses, and all the big periodicals place libraries at the disposal of their staff, thus relieving them to a certain extent from the necessity of buying books. We have already seen t h a t few journalists in Uruguay live solely by their profession. More often t h a n not journalism is a spare time profession, or at least one which compels the journalist to look to another calling for the balance of his income. This — 159 — will be made clear by t h e figures given below. These figures are preceded b y a few statistics relating t o t h e pay of various classes of workers and the cost of living, so t h a t an idea may be acquired of t h e real value of journalists' salaries. The lowest salary paid by t h e Government t o its officials is 50 pesos a month ; this is the salary of an office boy. A member of Parliament receives a monthly allowance of 360 pesos ; a doctor, even a t the outset of his career, earns a t least 300 pesos a month. Lastly, in t h e printing trade a good machine compositor is paid 140 pesos a month. A professional worker with a family can scarcely find a residence for less than 40 or 50 pesos a month, and for this rent he would have to be satisfied with a very modest flat. At the lowest estimate he would require a further 100 pesos t o be able t o live, and this figure is taken on t h e assumption t h a t his children are few and t h a t he is very economical. Compare these figures with t h e salaries of journalists : a n editor is paid 200-300 pesos, a political editor less than 200, a n d a first-rate journalist 100-180 pesos a month. These are all exceptional figures, moreover. The usual salary of an ordinary journalist a t Montevideo varies between 40 and 80 pesos ; some salaries are even lower ; as little as 20 pesos is paid t o t h e youths who write the sporting pages. I n the U.S.S.R. t h e Press Section of t h e Syndicate of Polygraphic Workers undertook an enquiry in January 1926 into the income and the family budgets of journalists 1. The enquiry covered 350 journalists (117 a t Moscow, 36 a t Leningrad, 59 in t h e big towns of t h e Ukraine, etc.) among t h e 26,000 in the country. I t enabled the following monthly averages to be determined as representing t h e family budgets of various classes of journalists : 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 1 Editor Journalist, sub-editor and manager Technical writer Literary contributor Proof-reader Technical secretary Vopossy Truda, Nos. 8-9, 1926 ; a n d : Chemovetz Roubles * 261.44 221.74 196.15 209.58 167.87 150.57 INTERNATIONAL LABOUR O F F I C E Industrial and Labour Information, Vol. X X I , No. 7. 2 A chernovetz rouble is worth about half a pre-war rouble, which a t p a r is 2.66 gold francs, 0.51 United States dollars, and approximately 2 shillings. — 160 — I n the aggregate it is estimated that the total salary of the head of a family is equivalent to 84 per cent, of his expenditure. The percentage is low (57 per cent.) among technical writers, and high (93 per cent.) among literary contributors. I t should be added t h a t the total salary referred to includes income derived from work other t h a n journalism proper, and representing about 20 per cent, of the total. The salaries of journalists are fixed by collective agreement, which establishes the basic rates ; these rates are multiplied by the coefficients allotted to each class. A new salary scale comprising twenty-seven rates is in preparation. The foregoing remarks will have revealed the striking disproportion t h a t existed at one moment in nearly all countries, and t h a t still exists in many places, between salaries, which remained almost stationary, and the cost of living, which often rose to considerable heights. The resulting grave difficulties were overcome more or less rapidly and more or less completely according to the general economic conditions obtaining in the various countries, b u t still more in proportion to the degree of organisation reached by the profession. I n the most favourable cases, thanks to the journalists' organisations, it was possible to give prompt attention to the situation, to adopt remedial measures, and to carry them out on a general scale. The salary of a journalist is frequently a complex aggregate into which several variable factors enter ; b u t here, as in other matters affecting the profession, the effort toward standardisation and stabilisation, to which we have already had occasion several times to refer, can be perceived. For instance, speaking generally, it can be said t h a t the practice of paying a fixed salary to professional journalists is becoming more and more common. I n their opinion this method of payment offers such advantages t h a t they desire to see it completely substituted for payment by article, and above all, for payment by the line. The latter is a system which makes for insecurity in the profession. I t also gives rise to serious difficulties in fixing compensation for dismissal or payment for holidays. Hence, newspaper men are glad to see t h a t the system of fixed salaries is no longer reserved for certain classes of journalists such as editors, sub-editors, heads of news departments, etc., but is extending to most of the other classes in the profession. — 161 — This tendency to suppress payment by results, or at least to introduce order into the system and to make it resemble the fixed salary system as closely as possible, is a salient feature of a number of collective agreements. The Austrian agreement, for instance, guarantees a minimum annual remuneration to all outside contributors paid by the job, even if the number of articles published by the paper does not warrant this remuneration. The same tendency is evident in the clauses of such agreements as those in force in Great Britain and Switzerland, which systematise the work of occasional contributors by requiring the employer to treat them — provided t h a t certain conditions are observed — as permanent contributors. The trend towards systématisation is to be found in other aspects of the salary problem ; the date of payment, automatic increments, and the periodic adjustment of rates, for instance. I t is towards this last point that, following upon their success in getting the principle of a detailed regulation of salaries included in their agreements, journalists are directing their efforts. They aim at securing what at present exists only in one or two countries, namely, the adjustment of salaries without undue delay to fluctuations in the cost of living. 11 V THE LABOUR MARKET UNEMPLOYMENT The unemployment problem assumes a peculiar character in journalism. Without going into the details of a very complicated and delicate problem, it may be said t h a t unemployment in most professions is usually due, directly or indirectly, to one of two causes : (1) an excessive influx of new recruits, or (2) economic depression ; t h a t is to say, it is due to a surplus labour supply or to an inadequate consumption of products. Sometimes it is the haphazard invasion of the profession by a host of beginners t h a t violently upsets the labour market ; in t h a t event, either unemployment is rife among the new arrivals, who find all the posts filled, or it engulfs the veterans of the profession who, perhaps, lose the favour of the employers or the readers, preference being given to the new contingents ready to obey their call. This phenomenon, familiar in industry, tends nowadays to diminish owing t o apprenticeship and the efforts made to recruit professions systematically. According to some, reports, however, it is widespread among brain workers. The legal, medical, and engineering professions in many countries are suffering from serious unemployment, attributed to excess of recruits. Sometimes it is an economic depression t h a t disorganises production and drives multitudes of workers into the streets. Like most other intellectual professions, journalism is affected indirectly by economic difficulties. I t suffers greatly from the after-effects of the financial embarrassment in which papers may be involved. A slump has only to make its appearance in trade, drying up the source of advertisements, on which the Press fives to a great extent, the price of paper and ink has only to rise, and the very existence of a newspaper is threatened. The weakest papers from the financial point of view collapse. Papers of long standing, and to all appearances firmly established, disappeared — 163 — for this reason a few years ago. I n such circumstances the whole staff of the paper is suddenly thrown out of employment. I t is true t h a t the big newspaper Press is strong enough to overcome crises of this kind, which are not fatal as a rule except to new ventures or to partisan sheets with slight financial resources. Unemployment resulting from economic crises, infrequent though it may be, is none the less existent in journalism. The case is different with unemployment resulting from a superfluity of recruits ; in contrast t o the other intellectual professions, it may be considered as extremely rare in journalism for the time being. In this respect the existence of special schools is undoubtedly of some service to the profession. One does not become a journalist as one becomes a barrister or a doctor. Between the candidate for journalism and the place sought after there is not t h a t screen, which the school may be said to be, through which the features of the profession appear only in blurred outline. The young man whose inclinations lead him to the medical profession concerns himself much more with the details of the university education which will open the doors of the profession to him, than with the probable condition of the profession when his studies are ended. The long years of study would, moreover, make the calculation of the prospects offered by the career an uncertain process. Hence numbers of youths rush with their eyes closed into courses of study which lead them to professions t h a t are already overcrowded, and in which they can make a living only with difficulty. This does not occur, as a rule, in journalism, where there is nothing to conceal the state of the labour market from those" who desire to enter the profession. To put it bluntly, one gets into journalism only if one finds a job \ There are no journalists without experience of journalism, but there are doctors who have 1 We have already shown (p. 16) t h a t English journalists, without being able a t the moment to point to overcrowding in the profession, call attention to the danger in this connection which may arise from private schools of journalism, which threaten to throw too many would-be journalists on the market. I n the United States, the only country in which the system of schools of journalism is working on a large scale, a great deal of unemployment is reported. I t is true t h a t it is not the pupils of these schools who are affected, because a great number of them are engaged before their studies are terminated ; it is rather the persons who have received no special training, and who are confronted with the serious competition of the trained men, who suffer. I t must not be concluded from the foregoing remarks t h a t the fear of overcrowding the profession must necessarily lead to the abandonment of schools of journalism. These schools could very well adjust their activities to the needs of the profession. Indeed, it is possible t h a t this system is desirable for preparatory schools of other professions, provided t h a t it is applied with foresight and prudence. — 164 — no practice, and chemists who have never earned their Uving by chemistry. I t follows t h a t to a much greater extent than in the other professional careers, admission to journalism is regulated by the demand for recruits ; this does not mean t h a t the pressure exercised by the supply of candidates (young men who have completed their higher education and who prefer this profession to another, or members of another profession who are desirous of changing their vocation) has absolutely no effect. But it is no more than the pressure of people who do not yet belong to the profession, and who would like to enter it ; it is not the crushing and demoralising weight of unemployment overwhelming young men a t the beginning of their career. While journalism suffers less than any other profession from overcrowding due to a glut of recruits, and while it suffers no more than the other professions from economic crises afflicting the general community, it suffers from one special cause of unemployment associated with circumstances peculiar to the profession. I t was remarked in the Introduction t h a t though journalism may be considered as a trade intended to furnish a livelihood to those who practise it, it is also possessed of a certain ideal character which gives it exceptional features. The journalist is not merely a wage earner ; he is as a rule a man of opinions and convictions, and employs them in his work. Whereas in many other professions political opinions and religious convictions may be quite unconnected with the work to be done, it does not matter whether one is a Conservative or a Radical for the purpose of making watches, or nursing the sick, or building bridges — the opinions and convictions of a journalist are more often than not one of the necessary elements of his trade. I t is true, as we have already seen, t h a t there is a tendency towards the creation of big Press undertakings dealing exclusively in news. They are already in existence in many countries, and the papers holding definite opinions are perhaps destined to yield ground to them. In the majority of countries, however, these papers have fully maintained their position, and many periodicals not calling themselves political papers, but considered to belong to the newspaper Press, are none the less under the influence of some policy or other, which is supported by their employees in all ranks of the editorial staff. A journalist's opinions are, then, closely allied with the practice of his profession. But men do not change their opinions as, for example, in industry they submit to the changes in a manufacturing process. The attachment which every man has t o his own con- — 165 — victions and the respect which everyone has or should have for the opinions of others, confer on journalism an unquestionable right to esteem, although, at the same time, they expose it to a certain danger. Upheavals in the realm of ideas have disastrous effects on the livelihood of journalists — much more so t h a n economic upheavals. Sometimes the movement of opinions is limited in scope, in which circumstances it may assume one of two forms : either changes in public opinion in the country, and a certain alienation of sympathy on the part of the people, will cause one or two papers to wither and finally to perish ; in t h a t case the movement is generally prolonged, and in consequence less severe ; or a paper will change hands, and alter its policy, with the result t h a t its staff are thrown out of employment. At other times the upheaval is of catastrophic proportions, as, for example, when a change in the form of government overthrows the entire Press of a country. There have been striking examples of this during the course of the last decade. Governments placed in power by revolutionary movements have been led to adopt, as methods of warfare, measures fatal to whole sections of the Press. In Russia, for example, large numbers of papers were suppressed during the Revolution, and in Italy, in the course of a few days at the end of 1926, some fifteen papers (among which were many of considerable influence), were suspended by decrees of the prefects. Journalism is thus liable to a form of unemployment unknown in other professions. Sometimes it is possible to find palliatives ; we have already seen x how in some countries journalists insure themselves against violent changes of opinions which may affect a single paper. Sometimes, however, the upheaval cannot be mitigated ; when all the papers belonging to a given school of thought in a country are affected, there is no course open to the unemployed journalists but to change their profession. As to the extent of unemployment in journalism, it is almost impossible to measure. The International Labour Office was not surprised to receive, in most cases, vague replies on this point from the persons and organisations to which its enquiries were addressed. In many countries, in fact, there is no means of discovering the number of unemployed journalists. This number is, moreover, in all probability subject to considerable variation. In several countries only very approximate methods are available, 1 Cf. "Termination of Services", p . 77. — 166 — such as the lists of situations vacant which certain associations send to those of their members who ask for them. The number of such lists sent out is not an absolutely sure criterion ; first, because they are sent only to members of the association, and afford no indication, unless by analogy, of the extent of unemployment among non-members ; secondly, because a number of the unemployed journalists belonging to the association may try to find work by their own efforts, without resorting to the list ; and thirdly, because many of those who receive the list are not out of work, but are merely looking for a better post. As a rule, and in the majority of countries, unemployment does not seem to give serious cause for concern ; it appears only very spasmodically. I n Great Britain, however, it is thought t h a t a certain seasonal regularity has been discovered in the fluctuations of journalistic unemployment. An increase in unemployment seems to be noticeable from September onwards, and after having reached its culminating point in November and December, it appears to diminish in January. Although it is very difficult to judge of the extent of unemployment generally, it has been possible in some countries to establish certain figures. I n Australia at the end of 1925 the Association of Journalists reported 25 unemployed members out of a total of 1,933, or 1.29 per cent. I n Czechoslovakia the normal percentage of unemployed among the members of the profession throughout the entire country varies between one and two \ The German Press Association reported a serious situation in 1923 ; at one moment the number of unemployed rose to 450, but it subsequently diminished. At the end of 1925 the list of situations vacant, which the Association publishes twice a week, was sent to 175 members out of a total of about 3,300 ; this proportion corresponds to 5.3 per cent, of unemployed. I n November 1927, the Association was sending its list to 235 persons ; it estimates that some 20 journalists who were in employment should be deducted from this number, leaving about 215 unemployed among t h e 3,600 members of the association, i.e. 6 per cent. The older 1 On 1 March 1928 there were some 10 unemployed among more than 1,000 journalists. — 167 — journalists form the majority of the unemployed. Their situation is a critical one : whereas young journalists find other posts fairly easily, it is not so easy for persons who are past middle age to find new employers, and the Association has observed in fact t h a t difficulties in obtaining fresh employment are encountered by journalists of forty years and over. Although unemployment among journalists does not reach disquieting proportions in Great Britain, it is nevertheless a source of anxiety to them. I t is feared particularly t h a t the amalgamation of newspapers and the establishment of Press " t r u s t s " , which is proceeding more actively there than anywhere else in Europe, will aggravate the dangers of unemployment in the future. The development of " trusts " generally leads to reductions of staff. The growth of big combines tends towards a " stereotyping " of the contents of the various papers acquired, and a consequent shrinkage of the opportunities of employment for the journalist. The results of this process would seem to cause more anxiety • among British journalists than changes in the political complexion of newspapers, which are somewhat rare in Great Britain. For the moment, unemployment amounts to no more than 3.62 per cent., according to information derived from the accounts of the unemployment fund of the National Union of Journalists, which in April 1927 showed 170 unemployed among the 4,700 members of the Union. As in Germany, it is the middle-aged unemployed who are a cause of concern to English journalists, because of the difficulties encountered in finding new work for them. I n five countries journalists appear to be devoting special attention to unemployment. I n France, Japan, and the United States, it is constantly stated t h a t a number of journalists are unemployed, although precise figures cannot be quoted. In Hungary and Rumania, unemployment has reached grave proportions. In Hungary, where the Press is in a very critical position, and where three influential papers, of which one was founded more than half a century ago, disappeared within the space of a year, it is calculated t h a t at the climax of the crisis in 1925 the proportion of unemployed among the journalists of the capital was as high as 18 or even 20 per cent. Journalists, as a matter of fact, were not the only persons to suffer from this crisis, for it affected all brain workers, including officials. The crisis is now less serious, — 168 — particularly as a result of the stabilisation of the currency. Several newspapers have disappeared, however, in the course of the last few months. The papers continue t o contend with serious difficulties, among the foremost of which is the rise in the price of paper. I n other countries little or no unemployment is reported. I n Austria, for instance, it may be said to be non-existent, notwithstanding the difficulties of the economic situation. For several years a high degree of stability has been observed in the Austrian newspaper undertakings, a condition which is attributed primarily t o the fact t h a t the regime established by legislation and collective agreement makes dismissal so expensive for the publishers t h a t they do not resort to it except for weighty reasons. I n Switzerland, in spite of the pressure exercised by the many people who want to get into journalism, unemployment is insignificant ; the candidates keep to their own profession until a situation becomes vacant in a newspaper. This method of entering a profession, as we observed above, does not disturb the equilibrium of the labour market. METHODS OF F I N D I N G EMPLOYMENT I n some countries, in which little unemployment is to be found, the need of employment agencies is not keenly felt. In others, where the organisation of such agencies appears to be necessary, and where the official labour exchanges do not cater for journalists or only achieve inadequate results, failing thorough knowledge and experience of the journalistic profession, the journalists themselves have taken the matter in hand by making use of their professional organisations and trying to find work for their unemployed colleagues. I n Australia the labour exchanges do not deal with journalists. I t is the journalists' organisations — the Australian Journalists' Association and the Provincial Press Association — which have taken up the business of finding work for their members. The secretaries of the local branches of these associations collect information concerning vacancies and communicate it to members who are out of work. — 169 — I n Austria, journalists themselves have undertaken the work of finding posts for their unemployed colleagues. The Organisation of the Viennese Press has a free employment department which looks for posts, not only in Austrian or foreign journalism, but even in other professions if need be. I n Belgium there are neither public nor private offices primarily devoted to finding work for journalists. The Belgian Press Association, however, possesses a department whose function is to give information as to the qualifications of journalists seeking employment to managers in search of employees. I n view of the small number of journalists unemployed in Belgium this department has not much to do. Brazil and Bulgaria possess no official or private institution whose duty is to place journalists in employment. I n Bulgaria, the Association of Sofia Journalists and the Union of Provincial Journalists occasionally endeavour to find positions for their colleagues who are without work. I n Canada there are only private employment agencies for journalists. I n Czechoslovakia there are neither public nor private offices specially engaged in finding employment for journalists. The Press associations, and particularly the Syndicate of Czechoslovak Journalists, keep a list of their unemployed members, and endeavour to place them in employment. In France, in the absence of public or private institutions specially devoted to finding work for journalists, some of the Press associations endeavour to secure situations for their unemployed members. During the period of serious unemployment from which Germany suffered in 1923, the public employment agencies undertook the task of finding posts for journalists. Efforts of this kind requiring, as they do, great technical experience of the profession and a certain familiarity with its psychology, were unfortunately not very successful. There are no private employment agencies for journalists. — 170 — The National Association of the German Press created an employment agency for journalists, including outside contributors and translators, at the time of its foundation in 1910. During the crisis of 1923 this department was organised on new lines, and was actively engaged in finding situations for the journalists who had been thrown out of work by reductions in the staff of hundreds of periodicals or by their total disappearance. The number of the unemployed, as we have already seen, rose at one moment to 450, and, as it could not place them in journalistic posts, the Association organised courses to facilitate their transfer to other professions. Banking, industry, and trade recruited a good number of journalists, of whom the majority returned to their old profession after the crisis had subsided. At the present time the Association publishes a bi-weekly list of situations reported vacant by the affiliated local associations. I n 1926, by this means, it drew the attention of its unemployed members to 434 vacant posts, an average of about eight posts a week. During the first five months of 1927 the weekly average rose t o ten. In 1926 no more than 47 members of the Association were found employment by means of the list. This means t h a t only about 10 per cent, of the situations vacant could be filled. The Association is endeavouring to increase the proportion b y improving the organisation of its information department ; by establishing closer collaboration between the local organisations and the central Association ; and by urging employers t o reserve some posts, if not in the editorial offices proper of the paper, at least in some other department, for middle-aged journalists who have given the best years of their life to the profession. These steps are justified by the fact t h a t 50 per cent, of the unemployed cannot get fresh work owing t o their age. Among the aims of the National Commission of Collaboration, founded by the Newspaper Industry Employers' Association and the National Association of the German Press, is the creation of institutions to combat unemployment and facilitate the filling of vacancies. The first step in this direction was the establishment by the local Commissions of Collaboration, created in accordance with the constitution and rules of the National Commission, of a periodical list of unemployed persons in the respective districts. This list, which is communicated to the employers, helps to find work for unemployed journalists. — 171 — Journalists in Great Britain who are looking for work could apply to the local exchanges of the Ministry of Labour, but no case is known in which a situation has been found through the intermediary of these exchanges. The appointments boards of the universities and the schools of journalism help students who are seeking employment. This is also one of the tasks of the University of London Committee on Journalism, which helps the students taking the journalistic course, instituted in 1919 by the Senate of the University. Lastly, the principal associations of journalists endeavour to find work for their members, and a large number of posts have been secured by them in the course of the last twenty-five years. The National Union of Journalists, for instance, publishes a list of vacant posts which it sends to its members on request. I n Greece there is no institution to deal with unemployed journalists, whether public or private offices, or Press associations. I n Hungary, the secretariat of the Journalists' Association includes among its functions the finding of posts for its unemployed members. I t is the only employment agency available for journalists. I n Italy, P a r t X X I I I of the Labour Charter provides t h a t the task of finding employment shall be performed in each profession solely by the joint employment agencies instituted in connection with the syndicates. I n conformity with these provisions, offices, with which both publishers and journalists collaborate, have been organised in connection with the regional syndicates. I n applying to these offices publishers are bound to give the preference to journalists registered with the Fascist Syndicate. No kind of institution for placing journalists in employment is known in Latvia or Luxemburg. I n the Grand Duchy the need for such institutions has not been felt. I n the Netherlands, in the absence of public or private employment institutions available for journalists, the Association of Dutch Journalists tries to find places for its members when occasion arises. — 172 — There are no employment agencies for journalists in Poland. I n Portugal, in the total absence of institutions to which journalists could resort, the Association of Journalists undertakes the work, in times of difficulty, of placing its unemployed members in situations, and even does so for professional journalists who do not belong to the Association. Rumania does not possess any public or private employment agency for journalists. The Press associations do not as a rule deal with the question. Spanish journalists are entitled to apply to the labour exchanges when they are looking for work, but, as the employers do not make use of these institutions when they are recruiting staff, the journalists refrain from registering with them. Posts are thus offered and sought individually. I n Sweden the public labour exchanges are open to journalists, who do not however resort to them as a rule. The Association of Newspaper Publishers, on the one hand, and the Association of Swedish Journalists together with the Press Association on the other, have instituted a joint employment agency known as the Press Employment Office, which has not been very active hitherto. Swedish journalists desire to see this institution reorganised, and are of the opinion t h a t employers and employees should be compelled to apply to it in case of need. Switzerland has no private employment agencies for journalists, and the official institutions are not concerned with the matter. On the other hand, the Swiss Press Association has organised an employment department with which the many persons who desire to take up journalism register their names, but which rarely has to deal with unemployed persons. As a matter of fact, publishers seldom have recourse to this institution. The United States have no agencies specially intended for journalists, who, if occasion should arise, may apply to the public or private employment offices for workers in general. — 173 — I n the U.S.S.R. none b u t the Government employment agencies are allowed to exist, but situations are not necessarily sought through their intermediary. I t will be clear from the foregoing remarks t h a t the methods of finding employment for journalists leave much to be desired. The institution of employment agencies on a systematic basis would be of the greatest advantage. I t would first of all enable the extent of unemployment to be gauged, — unemployment is certainly far more prevalent in most countries than is imagined — and, secondly, it would tend to counteract the sense of insecurity which is weighing heavily on journalism. Many associations of journalists, while stating t h a t there is little unemployment in the profession, point out the anxiety which the lack of security and the prospect of finding himself suddenly without work cause to the journalist. Well-organised employment agencies would certainly contribute towards reassuring the members of the profession. VI PROVIDENT INSTITUTIONS To the anxiety which the possibility of an abrupt termination of employment may cause among journalists must be added the apprehensions created by the possibility of an illness or an accident which would reduce them and their families to distress, or to say the least, would put them in a very difficult position. The salary of an ordinary journalist seldom allows him to save enough t o provide for his future. He is, like so many other workers, at the mercy of a chance event t h a t would deprive him temporarily or permanently of his ability to work. B u t while in many countries endeavours are made to an increasing extent to safeguard t h e wage earners in trade and industry against the risks to which they are exposed, the journalist, more often than not, is left t o his own resources. He is generally excluded from the scope of the laws on compulsory insurance, either because he is a professional worker or because his salary exceeds a certain maximum figure fixed by law. Yet the fact t h a t he is a professional worker does not save him from being defenceless against the risks which confront other workers, and his salary, little higher than the maximum named in the insurance laws, barely suffices to keep him alive and to meet his professional expenses. The profession compels him, in fact, to keep up appearances to a certain extent, and to buy books and periodicals so t h a t he may be constantly well informed as regards current events. I n most cases then, journalists have h a d to protect themselves. by their own devices against the risks t h a t threaten them. In some countries they secure the co-operation of employers for the constitution of insurance funds, either as a result of the legislation in force or by the insertion of special clauses in collective agreements. Sometimes the Government subsidises these funds ; it does so in Great Britain, in conformity with the general health insurance scheme. Sometimes the employers alone bear the insurance charges, either because it is compulsory upon them to do so, as is. — 175 -^ the case in Bulgaria with regard t o accident insurance, or because there is a provision to this effect in the collective agreement, which is the case in Austria. The various provident and insurance systems in each country for t h e benefit of journalists are summarised below. I n Australia there is no provident institution for the benefit of journalists, who have to be satisfied with the provisions of the collective agreement guaranteeing them paid leave in case of illness \ I t was however decided a t a conference held at the end of 1926 t h a t publishers should pay compensation to a journalist injured in an accident, and to the next of kin of a journalist meeting with a fatal accident, while in employment. Austrian journalists, whose status is noteworthy from all points of view, enjoy a comprehensive insurance scheme which is perhaps without equal in the profession. A whole network of insurances, covering the risks of illness, accident, old age, invalidity, death, and unemployment, has been established either by legislation or through the initiative of the journalists themselves. The terms of these insurances, remarkable enough for Austrian journalists in general, are even more so for those of the capital, thanks to the very generous provisions of the collective agreement of the Viennese Press. The advantages offered by the Austrian institutions may be briefly summarised as follows, according to risk. Unemployment. — The risk of unemployment has been met in various ways by Austrian journalists, but first and foremost by the many safeguards with which they have managed to surround dismissal. We have already seen 2 t h a t the collective agreement of the Viennese Press laid upon publishers the obligation to pay heavy compensation in such a case. This compensation, in the case of journalists with more than eight years' service, may reach two years' salary, including the salary of the period of notice, and it is still higher in the case of changes in the editorial policy of the paper. Thanks to this compensation, journalists thrown out of work are sure of their daily bread for a fairly long time, and are thus able 1 1 Cf. "Annual Leave", p. 119. Cf. "Termination of Services", p. 80. — 176 — t o look for new work without being harassed by anxiety. Further, any who are still unemployed after having exhausted all the compensation guaranteed by the agreement, are entitled to the weekly benefit provided by the general unemployment system for out-ofwork wage earners, fed by contributions of employees 1 , employers, the Government, and the municipalities. Finally, the Organisation of the Viennese Press grants assistance or loans to its members in case of unemployment. Sickness. — The Austrian collective agreement provides t h a t in case of sickness the journalist with more t h a n five years' service shall continue to be paid his full salary for four months. For each additional period of five years' service the paid leave is increased by one month, up to a maximum of twelve (Article 17). Austrian journalists are also covered by the compulsory sickness insurance system instituted by legislation. Prior to 1 July 1927 the journalists' insurance institutions were a certain number of approved funds ; among them was t h a t of the Concordia Association, with which most of the members of the profession were registered. After the passing of the Act on the insurance of employees, of 29 December 1926, which came into force on 1 J a n u a r y 1927, the Austrian Journalists' Pension Institute, founded five years earlier, became the sickness insurance institution with the title of the " Press Insurance Institute ". The insurance provides medical and dental treatment, medicaments, treatment in sanatoria, etc., a daily allowance not exceeding 7.50 schillings, and grants to journalists' wives who are confined. The Institute is also concerned with the prevention of diseases, and displays a certain amount of activity with this end in view. Accidents. — If he meets with an accident in the course of duty, the journalist receives from the Insurance Institute the refund of his medical expenses and a temporary allowance, which is increased by 150 per cent, if the attendance of a nurse is necessary, and which is converted into a permanent pension if the disablement persists. Death. — When a journalist dies, the paper pays his widow, under the terms of Article 12 of the collective agreement, a sum 1 We shall see later the changes eSected by the agreement in the distribution of insurance charges. — 177 — equal to the amount which the journalist would have received in case of dismissal 1 . The Insurance Institute, in addition, provides a funeral grant and pays the widow a monthly pension equal to half of t h a t which the journaKst would have received if at the time of his death he was entitled to an old-age pension. The pension allowed to each orphan is equal to 12 per cent, of the widow's pension. As the payment of these various grants and pensions may be subject to some delay, the Organisation of the Viennese Press has taken steps to enable it to come to the aid of the family of a deceased journalist immediately. In every case of death a special contribution of at least 3 schillings is levied on the members of the Organisation, and the yield is paid to the next of kin of the journalist. In order t h a t the required sum may be available without delay, each new member of the Organisation pays three contributions in advance into a special fund, and this procedure enables a sum of about 2,600 schillings to be paid to the family of the deceased man within twenty-four hours. The family is thus able to wait in greater tranquillity for the sums t h a t are due from the insurance system and from the employer, t o secure which the Organisation of the Viennese Press undertakes the necessary formalities. Old Age and Invalidity. — By the terms of the Act on the insurance of employees, every journalist is entitled to pensions for invalidity and old age. The basic pension for invalidity is equal to 35 per cent, of the salary of the insured person ; this proportion increases with the number of contributions paid. The old-age pension is payable to the insured person from the age of sixty (fiftyfive years for women) if he has made 120 monthly payments. The basic pension is equal to 35 per cent, of the salary of the insured person, and increases in proportion to the contributions paid. I t is not difficult for an Austrian journalist to become entitled to a pension amounting to 60 per cent, of his salary. The Act at first admitted to the insurance scheme only persons • having a monthly salary not exceeding 400 schillings, and this provision excluded many journalists ; but the Organisation of the Viennese Press succeeded in getting the maximum raised to 800 schillings. I t is thus possible for many journalists to earn retiring pensions of 500 to 600 schillings a month. 1 T h a t is t o say, the salary for the period of notice, plus the indemnity for dismissal. (Cf. above, p. 80.) 12 — 178 — The Organisation of the Viennese Press is now endeavouring to bring about the creation of a special fund for salaries above 800 schillings. I t also hopes to get independent journalists (outside contributors) admitted to the insurance scheme. At present they are excluded. Belgian journalists have no sickness or unemployment insurance institutions. They do, however, benefit from a system of oldage pensions and life insurance, instituted by an Act of 10 March 1925. Old-Age and Premature Death. — The Act of 1925 establishes compulsory insurance for old age and death in the case of employees of both sexes whose annual remuneration does not exceed 15,000 francs. The contribution amounts to 10 per cent, of the salary, 5 per cent, being paid by the employer and 5 per cent. by the employee. In the case of insured persons whose annual remuneration does not exceed 6,000 francs, the contribution is only 8 per cent., of which 5 per cent, is paid by the employer. Every insured person is entitled to an old-age pension from the age of sixty-five if a man, and sixty if a woman. If an insured pensioner dies, his widow receives an annuity equal to a certain proportion of the husband's pension. This proportion varies with the age of the man a t t h e time of his death. To the annuity is added a monthly allowance for each child of less than 18 years of age. In Brazil there is no general provident scheme for journalists. The Press associations and some of the big papers have established funds which grant benefits in case of illness, accident, unemployment, and death. About 80 per cent, of the journalists belong to these various funds, but as salaries are low, and contributions are small in consequence, these institutions can only grant inconsiderable benefits. Bulgarian journalists in regular employment are liable to the compulsory general insurance instituted by an Act of 6 March 1924, which covers the risks of accident, illness, invalidity, maternity, and old age. Accidents. — The Act declares t h a t every insured person who is the victim of an accident during, or in connection with, his work shall be treated, until cured, a t the expense of the public — 179 — insurance fund, which will even provide the necessary surgical appliances. During treatment he receives, in addition, a cash benefit for every working day lost, and varying from 12 leva for a daily salary of less than 15 leva t o 30 leva for a salary exceeding 61 leva. To this is added 1 leva for every child maintained by the insured person. If the victim is afflicted with total disability to work, he is paid an annual pension varying from 3,600 leva for a daily salary of less than 15 leva to 9,000 leva for a daily salary exceeding 61 leva. I n the event of the death of an insured person who is in receipt of an annuity in consequence of an accident, his widow obtains a pension equal to 40 per cent., and each of her children a pension equal to 30 per cent., of t h a t of the deceased. If the death is caused by accident, the survivor's pension is equal to t h a t of a person suffering from total disability. The costs of accident insurance are borne entirely by the employers. Every year the costs are divided among the employers in accordance with the number of their employees, the amount of salaries paid, and the degree of professional risk in their establishments. Sickness and Maternity. — In case of sickness, the insured person may be treated at the expense of the insurance fund for nine months in the course of a year. I n addition, for each working day lost he receives an allowance equal to t h a t provided for in the case of accident. Pregnant women are entitled to obstetrical and medical assistance, and t o the sickness allowance, for six weeks before and six weeks after childbirth. The cost of the insurance is covered by contributions paid by the insured persons, the employers, and the Government. The employers and employees each pay from 1.50 to 4 leva a week, according to the class of the insured person. (The class is determined by the salary, as in the case of the accident insurance). The Government adds a grant equal to half the total of all the contributions. Old Age and Invalidity. — I n the case of invalidity due to a cause other than an accident, the insured person receives a pension ranging from 1,500 to 6,000 leva, according to his class. From the age of sixty he is entitled to an old-age pension equal t o the invalidity pension, plus 1 leva per annum for each week, beyond the 156 weeks provided for in the Act, in respect of which he has paid contributions. — 180 — The contributions of the employers, the insured persons, and the Government, are the same as those for sickness insurance. I n addition to the Social Insurance Fund, the Association of Sofia Journalists has its own fund for unemployment, sickness, etc., and this will begin to provide pensions in the year 1930. Czechoslovak journalists benefit from several social insurance laws 1. The regime established by these various laws is indicated below. Sickness. — Journalists had their own sickness insurance scheme in 1883. The Act promulgated in t h a t year procured for insured persons, in consideration of a contribution, half of which was payable by the employer, and amounting to 5 per cent. of their salaries, a benefit of two-thirds of the basic salary, for fifty-two weeks. A new Act passed on 9 October 1924, and which came into force on 1 July 1926, reorganised the insurance scheme. The Act of 1924 relates to sickness, old-age, and invalidity insurance. Persons who benefit from the old-age and invalidity insurance scheme for private employees, instituted by the Act of 1906, are excluded from its scope so far as these two risks are concerned. This is precisely the position of the journalists, who are thus covered by the Act of 1924 only as regards sickness. This Act groups the insured persons in ten classes according to their salaries. The benefits are : (a) Free medical and pharmaceutical assistance for a period not exceeding one year for the insured person and the members of his family ; (b) A sickness allowance of 2.70 to 24 crowns a day, according to the class of the insured person, for a period not exceeding one year ; (c) Obstetrical aid for insured women ; (d) An allowance, equal to the sickness allowance, for six weeks before and six weeks after childbirth ; (e) An allowance, equal to half the sickness allowance and payable for twelve weeks after childbirth, for mothers who nurse their children ; (f) A funeral grant equal to thirty times the daily salary of the insured person. 1 The Syndicate of Czechoslovak Journalists accepts as members only those journalists who are insured in conformity with the legal provisions in force. — 181 — The sickness insurance institution may increase the scale of benefits if its means allow. The daily allowance, for example, may be increased by 30 per cent, for persons supporting a large family. The contributions are fixed by the insurance institution. I n normal times, they may not exceed 5 per cent, of the salary of the insured person, and half must be paid by the employer \ Invalidity, Old Age, and Death. — Journalists are subject, as we have seen, to the Act of 1906, concerning old-age and invalidity pensions for private employees, which was amended on 5 February 1920. This Act divides the insured persons into classes according to their salaries, and they are liable to contributions ranging from 6 to 90 crowns a month. Two-thirds are payable by the employers in the case of the first four classes, and half in the case of the other classes. The annual pensions, which were increased by 300 per cent. by the Act of 12 August 1921, are at least 2,400 crowns in the case of old age or complete disability, a t least 1,200 crowns for an insured person's widow, and at least 600 crowns for an insured person's orphan. I n addition to the retiring pensions guaranteed by the Act, there are others which the Association of Czechoslovak Journalists pays to some of its members. I n consequence of the depreciation of the crown, these pensions are as a matter of fact inconsiderable and only serve to supplement those granted by the law. Lastly, a number of big papers allow pensions to their editorial staffs. The entire system of journalists' pensions will possibly be reorganised shortly. A Bill has been prepared and will doubtless be submitted to Parliament in the autumn of 1928. This Bill provides for a retiring pension (which may amount to as much as 42,000 crowns a year) for all journalists who have completed thirty-five years' service, or who have reached the age of sixty. Invalidity pensions are also contemplated. Czechoslovak journalists regard the introduction of this Bill with satisfaction. Unemployment. — The sickness, invalidity, and old-age insurance schemes are compulsory. Unemployment insurance, on the other hand, is optional. The Act of 19 July 1921, which instituted it, provides, in accordance with the Ghent system, for I n journalism, the employer often bears the entire cost of the contribution. — 182 — Government contributions towards the costs of the unemployment benefits paid out of the associations' funds. To obtain this State assistance, amounting t o 50 per cent, of the benefit paid t o the unemployed persons, the professional associations must comply with certain conditions. The Syndicate of Czechoslovak Journalists grants its unemployed members relief supplementary to the governmental allowance. The monthly allowances amount to about 600 crowns (of which the Government provides half) in the case of unmarried journalists, and about 900 crowns (of which the Government provides one-third) in the case of married journalists. Until J a n u a r y 1928, French journalists were not covered by any general provident scheme. Since then, however, a general old-age pension institution has been in existence ; it will be considered later. As regards other risks — accidents and illness — the professional associations are endeavouring to set u p mutual-aid funds which come into play in serious cases. Sickness and Accidents. — The journalists' associations help their destitute members so far as they are able. Some associations succeed in getting their sick members into nursing homes and in procuring free surgical treatment for them. The insurance of journalists against accidents occurring in the execution of their duties is far from general in the newspaper world. Unemployment. — There is no real institute for assistance in case of unemployment. The Association of Journalists has a small relief fund maintained by gifts. Death. — A certain number of journalists' associations grant relief to the next of kin of their members. Thus the Marseilles Press Association, on the death of a member, makes a grant of 1,000 francs to his family. Apart from this, there are funds in some big Paris papers (which will be dealt with in connection with retiring pensions) to provide journalists' widows with a pension equal to half of t h a t to which the husband was entitled, provided t h a t there is not more than ten years' difference between the ages of the husband and wife. If the difference in age exceeds ten years, the pension is reduced by a percentage. Old-Age Pensions. — Even before the establishment of the National Fund, referred to below, there were in existence a number — 183 — of pension funds organised by journalists' associations (Paris journalists, Republican journalists, parliamentary journalists, Paris news writers, sub-editors, etc.). These funds, constituted by the proceeds of specially authorised lotteries (Press bonds, etc.), grant small pensions ranging from 600 to 1,200 francs a year to their needy members. Most of the holders combine these pensions with a restricted amount of professional work. I t must be added t h a t the Act of 1 April 1898 grants to mutualaid societies, which comply with certain conditions and which thereupon call themselves " approved societies ", a Government subsidy paid from the funds annually provided for this purpose in the budget of the Ministry of the Interior. A number of funds belonging to journalistic organisations have applied to be included in the scope of the Act, e.g. the Marseilles Journalists' Fund, whose purpose is to provide its members with old-age pensions. Finally, t h e staffs of a number of big Paris papers have formed incorporated societies which have established pension funds deriving their income from employers' contributions and deductions from salaries. One of these funds, open to the editorial staff, the administrative staff, and t h e workmen, employed on the newspaper, provides its members with old-age pensions calculated from the salary of t h e five best years in respect of which the member has paid contributions. The pensions vary from 27 per cent, of the average salary after fifteen years' service, to 45 per cent, after twenty-five years' service. For every additional year's service the pension is increased by one-tenth. The contributions paid by the insured persons are equal to 6 per cent, of their salary, and the employers add a like contribution. If he pays a contribution of 8 per cent. of his salary, a member assures for his wife an annuity in the case of his death. The system adopted by t h e institution just mentioned has doubtless served as a model for the General Fund which the French journalists' organisations, notably the Association of Journalists, have obtained after long negotiations with t h e employers' associations. During the first months of 1927 a mixed committee, composed of five representatives of the National Federation of French Newspapers (the employers' organisation) and five representatives of the professional associations of journalists, discussed the draft constitution and rules of a general pension fund. The draft was examined by specialists, and the final touches were added at the beginning of December. — 184 — The F u n d thus constituted assembles in one vast incorporated society the editorial staff of all the French newspapers adhering to the Fund. The old-age pensions which it will grant, equalling 40 per cent, of the average remuneration earned by the insured persons during their five best years, will be payable after thirty years' contributions and from the age of sixty years. A pension proportional to the contributions will be payable after twenty years' contributions. As a transitional measure for journaMsts who had not reached sixty years of age on 1 January 1928 (the date of the inception of the Fund), thirty years' practice in the profession are taken as equivalent t o thirty years' contributions. The income of the Fund is derived from equal contributions by t h e editorial staff and the publisher, each amounting to 5 per cent, of the salary of the insured person. In consideration of an additional contribution of 2 per cent, of the salary, the pension may revert in part to the widow. Finally, by a provision of fundamental importance, which the journalists were very desirous of obtaining, and which alone could assure the existence of the General Fund, the right to the pension follows the journalist for the whole of his career from paper to paper, on the condition, naturally, t h a t all the papers are members of the Fund. German journalists have a number of provident institutions, some of which are maintained by their association alone, and others with the help of the employers. Certain of the institutions are optional in character ; the most important is of fairly recent creation (it dates from January 1926) and is compulsory. In the short description of these institutions which follows, they are classified according to the nature of the risks covered. Sickness and Accidents. — German journalists are practically excluded from the scope of the legislation on sickness and accident insurance, which does not apply to employees earning more than 2,700 marks a year. The National Association of the German Press, on the other hand, has instituted mutual-aid funds on a district basis from which grants for medical and surgical treatment are made, and daily sickness allowances are paid. A proposal is under consideration for the creation of a central organisation to co-ordinate the work of the district funds, and the 1928 Assembly of the Association will have the matter before it for decision. — 185 — Unemployment. — The system of unemployment benefit at present in force in Germany, which is based on compulsory contributions from workers and employers, does not apply to persons earning more than 2,700 marks a year. Journalists are thus practically excluded from its scope. Old Age, Invalidity and Death. — German journalists have for many years had mutual-aid funds, and in some cases these funds have been able to grant substantial benefits to their members. As an example, one may take the insurance institution which the Union of the Labour Press possesses jointly with the officials of the independent unions and of the Social-Democratic Party. This institution grants pensions to widows and orphans of journalists as well as to newspaper men who are invalids or have reached the age of sixty-five years. The provident funds founded in some half-dozen big newspaper firms must also be mentioned. Together with the funds of the Union of the Labour Press, they have been deemed worthy, by reason of their importance, to exist by the side of the general insurance system of the German press. This system which was declared obligatory in June of 1926 by the National Labour Administration, except for the members of the few funds mentioned above, forms the subject of special provisions in the collective agreements of J a n u a r y 1926, and of a long series of agreements concluded at the same time between the two national associations combined in the German Press Collaboration Commission, and between this Commission and three big insurance societies. The agreement relating to normal service stipulates as follows (Article 11) : Every journalist shall be bound to insure himself, through the intermediary of t h e insurance institution of the National Commission of Collaboration of the German Press, with the insurance companies appointed for the purpose and on the terms agreed upon between the institution and the insurance companies. Journalists shall be liable to compulsory insurance from the age of twentyfive years and after one year's work in the profession. All receiving monthly salaries up to a maximum of 2,000 marks shall the liable to compulsory insurance. The publisher shall be responsible for effecting the insurance ; the journalist shall be a privileged insured person. The publisher shall be bound : (i) to pay a sum equal to 5 per cent, of the monthly salary of t h e journalist t o the insurance institution as his share of the premium ; (ii) to deduct from the monthly salary of the journalist a similar sum as the share of the contribution chargeable to the latter and to pay it to the same institution. If the journalist leaves the publisher's service, the latter shall be bound to make over to him the rights devolving upon him in virtue of the insurance contract. When an insured journalist enters the employment of another publisher who is also a member of the insurance scheme, he shall continue to be in enjoyment of t h e insurance in the measure provided for in these special provisions. — 186 — The institution founded by the two Press associations — the Newspaper Industry Employers' Association and the National Association of the German Press — is essentially only a regulating and intermediary organ between the insured journalists and the private companies with which the insurance is effected. As it was in a position t o conduct the negotiations with all the authority conferred by the imposing number of policies to be concluded under its auspices, the insurance institution obtained extremely favourable conditions. The journalists have the choice of two forms of insurance. Either they are guaranteed payment of a capital sum when they have reached the age of sixty-five years (in case of death before this age the sum is paid to their survivors) and a pension (which does not annul the right t o the capital sum at the proper time) in case of permanent invalidity amounting to at least one third of their working capacity ; or the insurance provides old-age pensions payable from the age of sixty-five years (fifty-five years in certain cases) and pensions for widows and orphans amounting to 50 per cent, and 20 per cent, respectively of the pension payable to the insured person, as well as invalidity pensions proportional to the total amount of contributions paid. A special fund of the insurance institution constituted special contributions of employers (equal to 2 % per cent, of salaries of the insured persons) is intended to supplement inadequate pensions of journalists who became members of institutions when they were over forty years of age. by the the the Another temporary fund guarantees, without previous contributions and as a transitional measure, means of support to persons of more t h a n sixty-eight years of age. I n case of unemployment the insured journalist may suspend payment of his contributions for one year without losing any of his rights. The system established allows a journalist who joins the insurance institution at the age of twenty-five years to acquire a pension payable at sixty or sixty-five years and equal to about half his salary. The institution comprised 3,232 members on 1 October 1927. I t collects contributions amounting to about 200,000 marks every month. The special fund for insured persons of more than forty years of age, known as the 2 % per cent, fund, received about 500,000 marks in 1927. — 187 — I t should be mentioned that, in addition to the benefits indicated above, the agreement of J a n u a r y 1926 provides t h a t if a journalist dies, the pubhsher must pay his salary t o the next of kin for a t least four months. I n Great Britain the law concerning compulsory health insurance and unemployment insurance contains limiting clauses, relating to the income of the insured person, which practically exclude journalists from their scope. I t will, however, be seen presently t h a t the National Health Insurance Act, which encourages optional insurance, confers substantial benefits on them. British journalists have several provident institutions, among which must be mentioned the Provident Fund, the Aid Fund, and the Orphan Fund, all in connection with the Institute of Journalists, the Newspaper Press Fund, and various funds of the National Union of Journalists. These institutions are self-supporting, except certain funds such as the Sick Fund of the National Union of Journalists and the Provident F u n d of the Institute of Journalists, which act as approved societies within the meaning of the Health Insurance Act, and which in this capacity enjoy certain advantages mentioned below. The risks covered by these various institutions are briefly explained below. Sickness. — All the funds enumerated above, with the exception of the Orphan Fund, insure against sickness. They derive their income from the general contributions of their members and from voluntary contributions. The Sick F u n d of the National Union of Journalists and the Provident F u n d of the Institute of Journalists whose organisation is of a special character in consequence of the Health Insurance Act which governs their activities, are in a category apart. This Act, which received the Royal Assent on 10 December 1911, makes all wage earners whose annual remuneration does not exceed £250 Hable to compulsory insurance. For persons whose remuneration is above this maximum insurance is optional, but benefits from Government assistance. Insured persons may choose the institution with which they desire to insure. When an institution has satisfied certain conditions imposed by the Act (obligation to refrain from seeking profits, control of members, etc.) it is called an "approved society". Its organisation and its activities are then subject to Government regulation, and it receives Governmental grants. — 188 — Members' are uniformly amounts, the respectively. benefits. contributions, fixed independently of salary rates, lOd. a week for men, and 9d. for women. Of these employers are required to contribute 5d. and 4d. The Government pays two-ninths of the cost of Benefits in case of sickness are 15s. a week for men, and 12s. for women, beginning with the fourth day of illness and for a duration of twenty-six weeks. If the illness turns to permanent disability the insured person receives 7s. 6d. a week. The right to benefit is acquired after the payment of 104 weekly contributions. If the means of the society permit, the Act authorises the payment of benefits additional to the statutory amounts. Apart from the two institutions mentioned, there are, as we have seen, various funds t h a t are not subject to the Health Insurance Act. One of these is the Newspaper Press Fund, to which any journalist may belong on payment of £15 15s. in one or several instalments. The right to benefit is acquired with the first instalment. The Provident F u n d of the Institute of Journalists insures its members against, disability (blindness,'mental breakdown, etc.). Its grants, in conformity with the provisions of the Friendly Societies Act, may not exceed £300, but supplements are added to these basic benefits. The supplements granted by the Provident Fund, which has received large gifts, recently amounted to 65 per cent, of the basic benefits. Accidents. — The institutions t h a t insure against illness also insure against accidents, but, as far as the latter risk is concerned, they have no claim upon the Government or employers' contributions. Death. — The Provident Fund of the Institute of Journalists insures the lives of its members for a basic sum not exceeding £300, which is, however, often augmented by substantial supplements. When they are able to do so, the other funds grant assistance in case of death, and the Orphan Fund of the Institute grants maintenance and education allowances to the necessitous children of deceased journalists. The Fund is supported b y voluntary contributions, and has amassed a capital of £35,000. Unemployment. — The Unemployment Insurance Act of 1920, which provides for contributions on the part of employers, workmen, and the Government, applies only to those non-manual wage — 189 — earners who are in receipt of less than £250 a year ; it does not therefore apply t o the general body of journalists 1 . In the absence of State unemployment insurance for journalists, the National Union of Journalists and the Institute of Journalists grant unemployment allowances to their members. The funds allotted to this purpose are derived from members' contributions. Old-Age Pensions. — The Act of 8 August 1925, which came into force on 1 J a n u a r y 1927, excludes from its scope non-manual workers whose remuneration exceeds £250 a year. Journalists, therefore, are practically unaffected by i t 1 . The Newspaper Press Fund employs a part of its capital in granting old-age pensions to a number of journalists. I t must be added t h a t a continually increasing number of newspaper firms take steps to provide the aged members of their staffs with pensions, and further t h a t aged journalists who are reduced to distress are entitled, like everyone else, to a small pension by the terms of the Old-Age Pension Act of 1908. Insurance questions received the attention of Hungarian journalists at an early stage. Their first mutual-aid fund was founded in 1881. The results of their efforts, in the absence of an official insurance scheme, to protect themselves against the risks of illness, accidents, old age and death, are indicated below. Sickness. — The Act of 1891 on compulsory health insurance does not apply to journalists. The Aid F u n d of the Association of Journalists, whose capital before the war amounted to 340,000 gold crowns, with an annual expenditure of about 20,000 gold crowns, was almost annihilated by the fall of the crown. The Journalists' Hospital and Sanatorium Union was originally an offshoot of the Association of Journalists, but it is now an inde1 Since a certain number of journalists may, nevertheless, be covered by the Acts relating to unemployment insurance and old-age pensions, it may be mentioned t h a t the first of these Acts provides for an unemployment benefit of 18s. 6d per week for twenty-six weeks in the year (plus 5s. a week for a wife and Is. for each child) and weekly contributions of 9d. payable by the employee, lOd. payable by the employer, and 6 s / 4 d. payable by the Government. The second Act establishes an old-age pension of 10s. a week payable a t the age of sixty-five, a widow's pension of 10s. a week (plus 5s. a week for the eldest child and 3s. for each of the others), and an orphan's pension of 5s. 6d. a week. The weekly contributions are 4%d. payable by the employer, the Government bearing the administrative costs and making deficits good by means of varying subsidies. — 190 — pendent institution. I t procures free medical, dental, and pharmaceutical treatment for its members. They numbered 692 in 1926, of whom about 450 belonged to editorial staffs. The monthly contributions amounted to 100,000-120,000 crowns. The Union possesses a rest home near Visegrad, where journalists may spend their holidays on reduced terms. There is free accommodation for four persons in the home. Accidents. — The Union grants immediate assistance to its members who are injured in accidents. Death. — On the death of an insured person, his next of kin receive a funeral grant from the Hospital and Sanatorium Union, and assistance from the Journalists' Old-Age Pension Fund. Unemployment. — There is a t yet nothing in the way of unemployment insurance in Hungary. The Association of Hungarian Journalists is actively engaged in seeking a satisfactory solution of the problem. Old-Age Pensions. — The Journalists' Old-Age Pension Fund was founded in 1881. I n 1914 it comprised 301 members, and its capital amounted to 3,600,000 gold crowns. At t h a t time it paid monthly pensions of 200 crowns to 35 of its members, of 150 crowns t o 27 journalists' widows, and of 50 crowns to 11 orphans. Unfortunately the F u n d suffered the same fate as the Aid Fund of the Association of Journalists. I n 1924 it was in possession of only 5,200,000 paper crowns (one paper crown = 0.00725 gold francs, or about 1 / 100 d. Although its membership rose again to 287, the Fund could only pay insignificant pensions, hardly exceeding 6,500 paper crowns a month. Orphans were in receipt of 100 crowns a month. To rescue their aged colleagues from distress, journalists in employment remitted t o the F u n d 1 percent, of their pay, and this contribution served to increase the pensions to a slight extent. Italian journalists have for many years persistently endeavoured to obtain what is considered as an absolute necessity in their unstable profession — an insurance system capable of giving them some security as regards t h e future. These efforts, the first results of which were seen in the numerous funds organised in connection with the regional associations, have at last led to the institution of a national fund. Created in October 1925 by the collective agreement of t h e former Press Federation, the National Provident Institute of — 191 — Italian Journalists was sanctioned by two Royal Decrees, one dated 25 March 1926, which gave it corporate status, and the other of 23 September 1926, which approved its constitution and rules. I t s aim is to organise various forms of insurance. I t is accomplishing its task by degrees, and uses the funds at its disposal to the best advantage, either in assuming itself the responsibility for the insurance or in serving as intermediary between the insured persons and other institutions. Until it has completely attained its object by covering all risks, it will allow the local funds to continue in existence in so far as they deal with risks not within the scope of the Institute. The income of the Institute is constituted : (1) By a contribution, half of which is payable by the employers, equal to 4 per cent, of the salary of the journalists insured (collective agreement of 1 October 1925) ; (2) The proceeds of a duty of 20 centesimi on all receipts for subscriptions to, or advertisements in, any of the periodicals of the country (Legislative Decree of 14 J a n u a r y 1926); (3) 10 per cent, of the duty levied on railway tickets delivered at special rates on the occasion of big artistic, sporting or other events. All the members of the National Syndicate belong, ex officio, t o the Institute, which also accepts persons who are not registered with the Syndicate, but to whom the collective agreement relating to employment nevertheless applies. The Italian system of insurance at present covers the following risks : Unemployment. — The mutual-aid funds maintained by t h e local syndicates generally include a special fund for the payment of allowances to necessitous unemployed persons. Sickness. — The collective agreement of the Italian journalists provides t h a t in case of sickness every journalist is entitled to three months' leave with full pay, and three months with half pay. If the illness is due to the journalist's work, it is covered by the general legislation on occupational diseases. Lastly, every journalist who is in need owing to illness may apply to the local funds, or to the National Institute, which grants assistance varying in amount according to the state of the annual balance sheet. Old-Age Pensions. — Old-age pensions are granted in the following manner : — 192 — The National Provident Institute of Italian Journalists contracts a life insurance policy with the National Insurance Institute in respect of every journalist belonging to the former body. On 19 December 1927 an agreement concluded between the two Institutes settled the details of these insurances. The individual policies established on the endowment insurance system are for a capital sum of 25,000 lire. The National Insurance Institute undertakes to accept without medical examination all journalists registered in the course of 1928, and to treat others in a very liberal way. Death and Invalidity. — By the terms of the collective agreement in force, the employer must pay the legal heirs of a deceased journalist the indemnities which the journalist would have received in the case of termination of services. The heirs also receive the sums provided for in the life insurance contracted with the National Insurance Institute. On 21 March 1928 the executive committee of the Institute of Journalists approved the issue of a second life policy of 25,000 lire which would be added to the first. I n the case of permanent disability the guaranteed capital sum is 75,000 lire. The insurance furnishes in addition a daily allowance of 25 lire in the case of temporary disability. Luxemburg journalists are not included in the scope of the Acts instituting compulsory sickness, old-age, and invalidity insurance. These Acts contain, in fact, salary limitations, which for all practical purposes shut out the majority of journalists. On the other hand, about a third of the journalists of Luxemburg belong to mutual-aid funds organised by individual papers for the benefit of their personnel. One of these papers provides its staff with a life insurance policy of 50,000 francs, and insurance against total disability to the amount of 100,000 francs. Another has taken an interesting step analogous to the system adopted in Germany. I t contracts with a private insurance society an endowment insurance falling due at sixty, combined with insurance against invalidity, for all its personnel, including t h e management staff. The contributions represent 8 per cent. of the salary, 3 per cent, being payable by the insured person a n d 5 per cent, by the paper. The Luxemburg Association of Independent Journalists, — 193 — to which, as a matter of fact, the editorial staff of the paper mentioned belong, is arranging for a similar insurance in favour of its members. Polish journalists are covered by the Act of 19 May 1920 relating to health insurance. By the terms of this Act every insured person is entitled, from the third day of illness, and during thirty-nine weeks, to benefit amounting to 60 per cent, of his basic salary. The contribution, the amount of which is not fixed by the law, is payable as to 40 per cent, by the insured person and as to 60 per cent, by the employer. Risks other than illness were not covered until recently, except b y mutual-aid societies organised by the Journalist's Association, and by funds instituted by a certain number of papers for the benefit of their own staffs, This is no longer the case. An Act of 24 November 1927, which came into force on 1 J a n u a r y 1928, organised unemployment, invalidity, and old-age insurance for professional workers, and journalists are included in its scope. Unemployment. — I n the case of unemployment the insured person is paid an allowance equalling 30 per cent, of his average remuneration if he is unmarried and 40 per cent, if he is married. Ten per cent, is added for each member of his family supported by him, provided t h a t the total allowance does not exceed fourfifths of the basic salary. Invalidity. — The invalidity pension is accorded to an insured person who is no longer capable of practising the profession — t h a t is to say, a person who has lost a t least half his working capacity. I t is composed of a basic pension equal to 40 per cent. of the basic salary and it is increased by one-sixth of one per cent. for each month's contribution beyond the first 120 months, provided t h a t it does not exceed three-fifths of the basic salary. For each child under the age of eighteen years supported by the pensioner, an allowance equal to one-tenth of the basic pension is granted, provided t h a t the pension, including the allowance, does not exceed the remuneration taken as the basis for the purpose of calculating the pension. Old-Age Pensions. — Old-age pensions are similar to the invalidity pensions. They are payable to men at sixty-five years of age (or sixty years if they have completed 480 monthly 13 — 194 — payments) and to women at sixty-five years also (or fifty-five if they have completed 420 monthly payments). The widow of a journalist receives a pension equal to threefifths of that to which her husband would have been entitled at the time of his death. An orphan with one parent receives one-fifth of this pension, and an orphan with no parents, twofifths. The contributions amount to 2 per cent, of the salary of the insured person for unemployment insurance and 8 per cent, for old-age and invalidity insurance. After five years the Government will, if necessary, fix new rates, without, however, exceeding 3 per cent, of the salary in the case of unemployment insurance and 10 per cent, in the case of old-age and invalidity insurance. The contributions are divided between the employers and the employees in the proportions indicated below, which depend on the amount of the salary of the insured person. Proportion of the contribution chargeable to Monthly pay employer Less than 60 zloty . 60 t o 400 zloty 400 to 800 zloty More than 800 zloty insured person aU V. V. 7s V. V. 7* The Warsaw Association, which groups about half of the journalists of the capital, grants assistance in serious cases even to persons who are not members. In Portugal, there is no general insurance scheme for journalists. The Press associations have created funds for the relief of their members in case of sickness, unemployment, death, and imprisonment for offences against the Press legislation. In Rumania, in default of a general provident scheme for the benefit of journalists, the Press associations have instituted mutual-aid funds whose scope includes sickness, death, unemployment, and old age. The Bucarest Journalists' Association and the Rumanian Press Association have been prominent in this work. These funds, composed of contributions from their members, afford relief varying with their means, but which does not — 195 — at all correspond to the cost of living. I t should be added t h a t some of the big papers have instituted pension funds for their staffs. The collective agreement of the minority Press of Transylvania stipulates t h a t the next of kin of a journalist who dies in employment shall receive from his paper, in two instalments, the amount due in case of dismissal, and which in no case shall be less than three months' pay. I n the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, journalists are in the enjoyment of a pension system sanctioned by law. The Decree of 25 September 1926, in addition to a chapter devoted to working conditions (including clauses concerning sick leave and death x ), contains a second part which establishes insurance for old age and invalidity. By the terms of the Decree, the Journalists' Pension Fund, which began to operate on 1 January 1927, is placed under the supervision of the Ministry of Social Welfare. I t provides retiring pensions amounting, in the case of a person with thirty years' service in the profession, to about 50 per cent, of the salary. I n case of death, the next of kin are entitled to the full pension if the insured person died while in employment. If he was a pensioner his widow is entitled to 20 per cent, of the retiring pension together with an allowance of 5 per cent, for each child. I n the case of complete disability, the insured person is entitled to a pension equal to his full salary ; in the case of partial disability, to a pension proportional to the degree of disability. The income of the Fund is composed of the journalists' contributions, amounting to 2 per cent, of the salary for the first ten years, 3 per cent, for the next ten years, and 4 per cent, for a third period of ten years. Like contributions are paid by the publishers, and annual grants are made by the Government and the Association of Yugoslav Journalists. The Fund may also receive gifts and the proceeds of events organised in its favour. The institute created by the Yugoslav Decree will not begin to use its capital before 1932. Until then the funds will accumulate. 1 On the death of a journalist, his employer must pay the family the [salary in respect of the period of notice, agreed upon between them, for the termination of services. If the journalist dies as the result of an accident happening in the course of duty, this sum must be doubled (section 10). — 196 — Spanish journalists are not covered by any general provident scheme. The Press associations, however, have managed to organise mutual-aid funds for the benefit of their members. The great majority of journalists belong to these associations, among the most important of which are the Madrid Press Association and the Barcelona Journalists' Association. The latter has organised a free medical and pharmaceutical department, and makes grants varying from 500 to 1,000 pesetas to the next of kin of its members in the event of death. At the present time there is no old-age pension scheme, but the Spanish Press Federation, which groups most of the journalists' associations of the country, is planning the creation of a national fund (Montepío nacional de periodistas) which will provide the aged members of the profession with retiring pensions. The scheme already mentioned for the regulation by law of conditions of employment in the Press, prepared by the National Assembly, which is encountering a certain amount of opposition among journalists, provides for the institution of provident funds. These funds, which would be obligatory and controlled by the Government, would be constituted by the contributions of the journalists and by a levy on the net profits of newspapers. I n default of a general and official insurance scheme, Swedish journalists have three provident funds. Sickness and Accidents. — The members of the Association of Swedish Journalists in the case of illness or accident are in receipt of relief from the provident fund of their association. I n connection with the Press Association, there is another fund, the "Norstedt and Söners F u n d " which represents the proceeds of a gift, and which is intended to "help journalists in need". Unemployment. — Every member of the Association of Journalists who is without work may ask the Provident Fund of the Association for a grant, the amount of which is fixed by the Council of the Association in conformity with the following rules : the unemployed journalist may receive a monthly allowance equal to 50 per cent, of his last salary. This allowance is paid during three months if he has been a member of the Association for five years. If he has been a member for less than five years, be receives only 33 l / 3 per cent, of his salary, and if he has been a member for only a year, he receives a single lump sum of 300 crowns. — 197 — Death. — The Swedish Press Pension Fund, of which an account is given below, establishes insurance policies in favour of widows and orphans, but only an insignificant number of Swedish journalists have subscribed to these policies. Old-Age Pensions. — I n 1874, the question of old-age pensions was discussed in the Press Association. I n 1882, the constitution and rules of the Swedish Press Pension Fund were adopted, and before long the capital of the F u n d amounted to more than 600,000 crowns, while 20,000 crowns were paid out in pensions to about 50 persons. Anyone who was employed in a newspaper, even in the managerial department, could be a member of the Fund. I n 1905 an attempt was made to reorganise the F u n d on the basis of co-operation between the Press Association, the Association of Swedish JournaUsts, and the Association of Newspaper Publishers ; but it was only in 1922 t h a t an agreement was reached, in accordance with which the journalists' and publishers' organisations recommended their members to participate in the Pension Fund. The Fund is maintained by equal contributions from employers and employees (the latter's share may not exceed 5 per cent, of their salary) and pays pensions not exceeding 50 per cent. of the salary of the insured person. The retiring age is sixtytwo years. During the first years of the Fund's activities, pensions may not exceed 840 crowns a year in any one case. I n Switzerland there is no provident institution for the benefit of journalists, but an agreement signed in 1923 by the Press Association and the Publishers' Association states t h a t : . . . While respecting the agreement of 1919 concerning minimum salaries, the publishers must make the following annual payments as their share of the insurance of the members of their editorial staff belonging to the Swiss Press Association : 1. For every journalist employed in the head office of a paper appearing les3 than six times a week, 250 francs. 2. For every journalist employed in the head office of a paper appearing a t least six times a week, 500 francs. These supplements to the annual salary constitute the publisher's share of the annual premium for the old-age and life insurances which must be effected by the publishing house, with t h e financial co-operation of every permanent journalist, and for his benefit. The insurance policy is the property of the journalist, b u t it is nevertheless under the surveillance of the publisher. I n the United States there is no general insurance scheme for journalists. Some big papers, however, have their own funds which insure their staffs against certain risks. A big Washington daily paper, for example, has instituted an insurance fund covering — 198 — old age and sickness for the benefit of its employees, and also a savings bank to which the firm contributes half as much as the amount deposited by each member. The sickness and old-age fund is maintained wholly at the expense of the paper, which pays contributions equal to 5 per cent, of the salaries of its employees. The fund provides old-age pensions payable at sixty years of age and equal to 50 per cent, of the insured person's salary. Upon his death it pays the next of kin an allowance not exceeding 3,000 dollars. Finally, every insured person suffering from illness receives an allowance equal t o his full salary during thirteen weeks, and half his salary during thirty-nine weeks. American journalists benefit, in addition, from a number of foundations such as t h a t provided for in the will of Mr. James Gordon-Bennett. This foundation occupies itself with aged journalists belonging to one or two papers in New York. The Charles D. Haines Foundation may also be mentioned as having set up a home for journalists in Florida in November 1925. Journalists in the U.S.S.R. who belong to the permanent staff of a newspaper are included in the general social insurance scheme. Outside contributors may participate only if their collaboration is of a permanent character, and if the salary they receive from the publishers constitutes their main source of income. The social insurance scheme covers the following risks : (a) sickness and accidents (temporary disability) ; (b) permanent disability ; (c) unemployment ; (d) death ; (e) maternity. All salaried employees who form part of the permanent staff are automatically brought within the social insurance scheme. The contributions are paid in their entirety by the employers. I n theory, the situation of journalists with regard to the social insurance scheme is identical with t h a t of industrial workers. I n practice, however, journalists benefit from it in a smaller degree. The enquiry, to which we have already referred 1, carried out by the Press Section of the Syndicate of Polygraphie Workers, shows t h a t the fraction represented by grants from the social insurance funds amounts to 0.2 per cent, of the income of a journalist, whereas it amounts t o 5 per cent, in the case of an industrial worker. 1 See "Salaries", p. 159. — 199 — The efforts put forth by the journalists in a number of countries to organise provident schemes will be apparent from the foregoing survey. In two or three of these countries they have obtained notable results, but, generally speaking, there remains a great deal to be done. The International Federation of Journalists has seen that this is a matter in which it could do very good work by studying and making known the systems that have given the most convincing results in practice. Among its aims, as defined in its rules, is "the examination of the best methods of assistance and insurance applicable to the profession, and their application for the benefit of organisations which desire to make use of them". Soon after its foundation, it set up a Committee on Assistance and Welfare, whose seat was fixed at Vienna, in a country in which journalists have to their credit some of the finest achievements in the realm of insurance. The Committee started work immediately, and it will shortly publish the first results of its investigations. CONCLUSIONS The end of our survey has now been reached, and it will be well to pause a moment to see if its cardinal features can be brought into relief. W h a t strikes a student of conditions in journalism first of all, is t h a t it is a profession in process of organisation, a profession t h a t is putting its house in order. Before our eyes, a concentration of effort, together with a simplification and an adjustment of the constituent elements, are little by little being substituted for a reign of chance and chaos, and the blind, pitiless play of forces sprung from false conceptions of individual interests. This phenomenon, in a sphere in which the most marked individualism has long held sway, is certainly instructive. B u t our task here is only to note its economic effects, and its influence on professional activity in its various forms. One cannot but be impressed by the striving to standardise and systematise the profession. The movement towards a definite status, towards permanent conditions, is general ; the desire for stability and regulation is universal. These developments present different aspects in different localities ; here and there they reveal themselves in the creation of co-ordinating organs and special judicial bodies and in a codification, steadily becoming more rigid, of what was once a congeries of ill-defined customs. One of the most salient features of this progressive organisation of the profession, this advance towards a clearly defined status, is the activity displayed by journalists united in increasingly disciplined and cohering organisations. Grouped, to begin with, in purely friendly associations, they imparted a more and more accentuated trade union character t o their organisations as the industrialisation of the newspaper developed, and the economic difficulties besetting them grew more serious. They were among the first of the brain workers to see the advantages of professional organisation as a means of protection, and to employ it deliberately. They have thus given the lie to the assertion t h a t the professional classes are instinctively hostile to all forms of professional solidarity — 201 — and to all organised effort. Here we see brain workers — and journalists are unquestionably brain workers, for they are covered by any definition which may be given to the term — who have succeeded in constituting highly combative associations, thanks to which they have achieved striking gains in various quarters. I t is difficult to say up to just what point the example of the manual workers was decisive in this respect. For a long time journalists were in a position to observe — quite near at home, in fact, among the newspaper printers — the support afforded by trade union organisation in times of economic trouble, and its part in the smallest improvement in the lot of the workers. They realised, too, what the conditions of the workers would have been without it. Moreover, several journals have for many years had columns devoted to labour affairs to which specialist writers give much time and care. These specialists were able not only to give definition to the somewhat nebulous conceptions of their colleagues, but to initiate them into the principles and the mechanism of trade union organisation. Thus, when their difficulties increased, they were quite naturally led to employ the same weapon. Journalists in different countries, however, did not all react in the same way when confronted with these difficulties. Some, as we have seen, deliberately copied the example of the manual workers, and unhesitatingly applied their methods as soon as they realised the advantages to be obtained by this policy. Others, seeing in their individualism, and their antipathy to all kinds of organisation, one of the distinctive characteristics of the brain worker's status, and bent, above all, on maintaining what they considered to be the hall-mark of a class of society, refused to employ methods t h a t were looked upon as alien to the profession. I t may be said t h a t for them the trade union activities of the manual workers, far from serving as a model, were an obstacle to the adoption of defensive principles in professional matters. Others again, who were not of the opinion t h a t their professional status must necessarily go hand in glove with an individualism opposed to all professional solidarity, nevertheless hesitated to employ trade union methods, for fear of damaging their case before the proprietors, and thought t h a t they would obtain better results by appearing to repudiate any combative tendency, and remaining faithful to the old system of more or less individual discussion. But as soon as the meagreness of the results achieved — 202 — by these conciliatory tactics was brought home to them, they did not think twice before following in the tracks of the manual workers. I n recent times journalists have buñt up associations organised on purely trade union lines, and far from deploring this policy as one entailing the abandonment of some of the characteristics peculiar to their professional status, they are obviously proud of the system of agreements thereby attained and the successes won by their efforts, as well as the example of solidarity t h a t they have given. I n many countries, moreover, the efforts of journalists encountered a fairly sympathetic attitude on the part of the employers, and this circumstance greatly facilitated the codification of working conditions in the profession. Realising t h a t such a codification offered a firm foundation for the future relations between the various groups of which a publishing house is composed, and t h a t by the good will and the stability which would ensue, it would assure the prosperity of the newspaper, the publishers agreed to discuss in great detail the working conditions of their editorial staffs. I n some cases they consented to real sacrifices, merely making sure, by vigorous steps towards organisation on their own side, t h a t the terms agreed upon would be universally carried out, and consequently could not disturb the free play of competition. The employers' organisation thus assisted in the work of codification, first of all by enabling the two parties t o come into contact and fruitfully discuss the problems raised, and later by facilitating the adoption of reforms, the equitable execution of which by all concerned would not be open to doubt. The profession was not disorganised by any unsystematic application of the measures decided upon but was reorganised at a higher level. We have seen t h a t in countries where the conditions of the journalistic profession have been subjected to codified regulations there are two kinds of codes ; those established within the bounds of the profession by agreement between journalists and publishers, and those of a legislative nature. For the moment the latter variety is but sparsely represented. Legislation merely sanctions the provisions embodied in agreements and gives them the force of law, or, if it goes further and propounds specific regulations, it has to be completed by agreements. I n only one instance, in the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom, is there to be found a legislative measure t h a t takes precedence over all governance by collective agreements, and renders them almost superfluous by the — 203 — abundance and precision of its clauses and by the real progress t h a t it effected. If at this stage we examine the provinces in which the efforts of journalists have been made, the points to which they have been directed and the results obtained, we find t h a t there are three classes of problems ; these we shall briefly survey. The first class has to do with salaries. Whenever defensive associations have been created in journalism, their first task has been the improvement of salaries, which had lagged far behind the inflated cost of living due to the war, and were therefore, in view of current prices, much below the 1914 level. The situation resulting in most countries from this state of affairs was an intolerable one, and it was a decisive factor in the growth of the defensive movement among journalists. The first essential was to be able to make a living out of one's work, leaving the conditions in which the work was done for later consideration. The salary problem was thus in the forefront of the journalist's cares, and his first efforts were towards a collective solution which would leave as little room as possible to arbitrary proceedings. In many countries the establishment of a minimum salary was secured ; the harmony between the entire scale of salaries and the cost of living was restored, and the editorial staffs of many newspapers were rescued from a lamentable situation. Here and there journalists have succeeded in safeguarding the advantages gained by the introduction of the sliding scale (whereby salaries vary with the cost of living), or at least by securing the right of submitting urgent and unforeseen matters to a permanent body. The second class of problems, without exception, springs from the general anxiety with regard to security of tenure. To co-ordinate and systematise the profession by regulating recruiting, by introducing rules governing dismissal, by delimiting carefully the grades of newspaper workers, each with its rights and duties clearly defined, and by combating the dangerous competition of amateur journalists ; to make war on unemployment ; to organise insurance ; to guarantee a just and sure settlement of disputes — these are all tasks aiming at satisfying the crying need for security in a profession in which the cares of the morrow have so long predominated, and in many places still do. We know of the important results obtained in some countries in connection with this group of problems. We have mentioned — 204 — the clauses of collective agreements prohibiting publishers from accepting free copy, and others t h a t avoid the competition of outside contributors by compelling papers to pay them as highly as the permanent editorial staff. We have drawn attention to the safeguards surrounding dismissal, especially in one country, where the conditions attaching to it are so onerous for the employers t h a t journalism has become a remarkably stable profession. An account has also been given of the important results obtained here and there with regard to special jurisdiction and arbitration, which journalists prefer to the ordinary courts for reasons of technical competence. Special procedure of these kinds has contributed in a great measure towards establishing security in the profession, thanks to the certitude which its members have of being judged, should occasion arise, by men thoroughly acquainted with the needs and customs of journalism. We have also brought to notice the amplitude of the provident schemes which journalists have set on foot in various countries with the co-operation of the employers, and in some cases with the aid of legislation. The third group of problems to which journalists have devoted their attention relates to working conditions. While it is essential to obtain a salary t h a t makes normal living possible, and while it is necessary for the worker to be in the enjoyment of a certain security shielding him from unexpected catastrophes, and thus bringing to his mind the freedom and tranquillity without which fruitful work would be an impossibility, it is of no less importance t h a t his task should be performed in suitable conditions. The worker must be protected from the fatigue caused by overwork, and from the harmful exploitation of his faculties, a small part of which, to say the least, he is entitled to devote to interests outside the profession. Working conditions, including hours of work, night work, weekly rest, and holidays, have been described in the course of our survey. I t must suffice to recall that, in spite of the elusiveness of the questions of hours of work and night work in journalism, they have been dealt with in one or two countries by collective agreements ; t h a t the problem of weekly rest, the solution of which was rendered difficult by the modern notion of a daily paper, has been solved in many countries by legislation ; and t h a t the problem of holidays, the easiest to solve from the technical point of view, has received fairly liberal treatment in most of the existing collective agreements, and in one special law. — 205 — I t may be asked : What remains to be done in the realms of salaries, security of tenure, and working conditions ; and, from the international point of view, what conclusions may be drawn from an examination of the task which is still to be accomplished if journalists are to be assured of the protection to which, like all other workers, they are entitled? The consideration of these points will bring our survey to a close. In several countries the salary question is a long way from settlement. Sometimes, and this is the most frequent case, salaries t h a t were adequate before the war are so no longer, and the profession, once equipped with teams of excellent specialists, is menaced, after the retirement of the older members, with dilution and a consequent qualitative impoverishment. I t is obvious t h a t young men will not be tempted to enter a profession, doubtless full of allurements, but incapable of furnishing a decent livelihood. Answer may be made t h a t the law of supply and demand may come into play at this moment, and that as the number of recruits falls salaries will naturally rise. This process, which occurs in other professions, would be but imperfectly realised in journalism, where the working of the law is disturbed by the large numbers of people who derive advantages from practising journalism without being obliged to earn their living by it. A paper can always find means of procuring free copy, or at any rate, cheap copy, if it does not make too many difficulties about the quality. The ease with which one can " do a bit of journalism " while engaged in another vocation is a constant danger threatening the Press, and it may, in some circumstances, notably when there is a general drop in salaries, do the utmost harm to the profession. The newspaper is not altogether a machine ; in fact the human element plays the principal part. If skilled workers are indispensable merely for the supervision of moving machinery, for the running of a paper it is, a fortiori, essential to have a staff whose mental qualities will make its reputation. The needs of the Press clamour louder and louder for the constitution of a corps of experienced specialists, and this can only exist by the payment of adequate salaries and by the institution of various safeguards tending, not to exclude all outside contributors, but to eliminate production of inferior quality by fixing rates of pay so high t h a t the paper automaticaly rejects all unqualified amateurs. In countries where low salaries are not due to difficulties arising out of the war, but are of long standing in journalism, the situation is analogous, but with a difference. Here circumstances have not — 206 — permitted the formation of a large corps of professional journalists such as exists in other countries, and enables the Press t o stand firm amid salary troubles — thanks more especially t o the older men — without lowering its standard in the slightest degree. I n all countries in which salaries have been inadequate from time immemorial, there has grown u p a sort of co-partnership between journalism, considered as a spare time profession, and other vocations. This state of affairs threatens to disturb the development of the Press in the future, if no change occurs in the policy of newspapers in the matter of remuneration. The remark is naturally of an absolutely general nature, and does not apply to a few big papers, which, even in countries where low salaries are the order of the day, have been able, by means of exceptional emoluments, to assemble those corps of professional writers t h a t are indispensable to the modern journal. Not to speak of humanitarian reasons, which require t h a t a worker who throws his whole being into an undertaking shall receive a salary t h a t enables him to uve decently, it is to the advantage of the Press t h a t a paper should not neglect those who are its life and soul, but should rather equip itself with a staff capable of ensuring its upward progress. I t appears t h a t employers, at least in some countries, are reahsing to an increasing extent t h a t the salaries of the editorial staff of the newspaper stand in need of a thorough overhauling, and t h a t the profession will not be properly organised in the absence of salary scales corresponding to services rendered, and thus capable of attracting to the paper and keeping them there, the types of men essential to its success. What is required is the establishment of minimum salaries adequate to the various classes of work,. and, wherever possible, the institution of sliding scales permitting automatic adjustments of salaries according to the fluctuations in the cost of living, or at the very least a system providing for periodic revision, and supple enough to ward off the dangers of a crisis such as t h a t which journahsm recently passed through. I t is for the journalists' organisations, once they are soundly established,, and the publishers' associations, which are quite capable of being guided by the common interests of the profession, to discuss terms. and to crystallise them in collective agreements, as has already been done in a certain number of countries. I t does not seem likely t h a t international measures, unless they are very vague and general,. can be brought into operation, at any rate for the time being. I t is quite otherwise with questions relating t o security of tenure.. — 207 — Unlike the problem of salaries, the practical aspects of which are extremely varied, and which could not be dealt with at the present time in as precise a manner as is desirable, except nationally or even regionally, the problems in connection with security of tenure arise from needs so uniform t h a t they seem particularly suited to receive solutions of an international order. Without doubt they are not all equally ripe for solutions of this kind ; the question of recruitment, for example, which involves t h a t of professional training, is certainly not sufficiently advanced. Journalists are not in agreement on the subject ; if they are unanimous in desiring a certain standardisation of recruitment and professional training, they differ as to the means of attaining the end. The question is a live one ; it has been raised in all the professional associations, b u t it is still in the discussion stage. I t is probable t h a t in the near future, when, the experiments being made on various sides have borne their fruit, the profession will be able, with the help of experience, t o reach an agreement on the methods to be employed. The constitution of a more or less protected profession, t h e criteria for discriminating between the professional grades (more especially between the inside and outside staffs), the attitude t o be adopted towards amateur journalists ; in brief, the entire complex of factors affecting the composition, the internal organisation of the profession, and its relation to other callings, these are also questions which do not appear to have reached a stage of development fit for treatment by general measures at the present time. They will, however, be ripe for such treatment later on ; it is n o t open to doubt t h a t the evolution of journalism will lead to t h e constitution of a sharply defined professional corps, or t h a t when this corp is constituted it will be useful to determine its structure by international action. Co-existent with these problems, which, as we have said, are not yet sufficiently mature, there are those connected with methods of finding employment, dismissal, and special jurisdiction ; these it does seem possible to state and treat in international terms at t h e present time. Valuable experience has already been acquired in these domains ; it could, if occasion should arise, provide the basis for discussion. In some countries journalists have secured a satisfactory settlement of the questions, but in others little or nothing has been done. Yet the same need is found in all, and it can be satisfied only by the same means. I t is true t h a t unemployment is not everywhere rife to the same extent, but then nothing is so variable as unemployment. I t — 208 — makes an appearance where it is totally unexpected, and it may assume menacing proportions to-morrow in a locality which is free from it to-day. Methods of closely related kinds can be employed throughout the world for its prevention and cure ; indeed, if there is one problem in which the experience of one country can be usefully applied t o another, it is t h a t of unemployment. There is not the shadow of a doubt t h a t measures for its abatement, and in particular, the organisation of employment agencies, could with advantage form the subject of international agreements. The question of dismissal, which it is convenient to widen, and to study under the more comprehensive definition of termination of services, is in the same state. The importance t h a t journalists in all countries attach to it is well known ; with the questions of salaries and provident schemes it forms the trinity of problems with which journalists are the most concerned, and we have seen t h a t one of the first acts of the International Federation of Journalists was to place it on its agenda for immediate consideration. Important preparatory work has been done by the Federation, and it is certain t h a t a full discussion of the problem on an international basis — a discussion which the work of the Federation has inaugurated in a very fitting manner — would be welcomed by all countries. If this discussion resulted in an international agreement guaranteeing journalists a minimum of security, it would be a great step towards organising and stabilising the profession. This progress will perhaps be realised. I t has, in fact, been suggested t h a t the question of the termination of journalists' services should be included in the agenda of the Committee on Intellectual Workers recently created in connection with the International Labour Office, and it is within the bounds of possibility t h a t it will one day be brought before the International Labour Conference, which will have to decide as to the desirability of a binding international Convention. Very much the same may be said with regard to special jurisdiction. The establishment of exclusively professional courts, which journalists are almost unanimous in desiring, would not be fraught with any great difficulty. A number have already been successfully instituted in several countries, and their adoption by the remainder would not be a vast undertaking. The International Federation of Journalists has also added this question t o its agenda, side by side with t h a t of dismissal, and if the Committee on Intellectual Workers has, of the two, selected the termination of services, it is doubtless because it is of graver concern to journalists. — 209 — The most urgent requirements need t o be dealt with first ; after the profession has been endowed with a system t h a t puts its members beyond the reach of unforeseen catastrophes, improvements can be effected in the bodies whose duty is t o enforce the system and see t h a t it is interpreted in a spirit showing the widest comprehension of the conditions obtaining in the profession. The choice of the Committee on Intellectual Workers does not in any sense mean t h a t the question of special jurisdiction does not merit international treatment. I t is, on the contrary, highly suitable for such treatment, and it is quite possible t h a t it will receive an oecumenical solution. The question of provident institutions is a more delicate one. I t is another of the predominant cares of journalists, and.though it has received a fairly satisfactory solution in some countries, in others it is still in an incipient stage, and requires to be taken in hand without delay. I t is impossible t o say whether it is capable of receiving a solution of an international order. I n any case, it looks as though it cannot be officially examined independently of the general problem of social insurance. The journalists' organisations would do well for the moment to take up the matter themselves, basing their efforts on what has already been accomplished elsewhere. The results obtained in more t h a n one country are most encouraging, and they can be equalled wherever journalism has attained to some degree of organisation. There remain the questions grouped together as working conditions proper. These vary considerably from one country to another ; they depend on local usages, the stage of development reached by the Press, and the different forms assumed by it in different districts. I t would be a very difficult matter to regulate them in detail, merely from paper to paper in the same locality, not to speak of a national or even a regional regime. This is at all events true of two of these questions — hours of work and night work. At the present time neither appears to be ripe for international action. I t is possible however that, when the evolution of journalism has become more uniform, a certain degree of general codification will be attained. I n one or two countries, as we have shown, the weekly hours of presence in editorial offices have been fixed by agreements, and a distinction has been established between day work and night work as regards both duration and remuneration. But in most countries only varying customs exist, and the journalists' organisations have not dealt with the problem except in a quite desultory manner. A certain change 14 — 210 — however in this respect has been noticeable during the last few decades, and it is not excluded t h a t these questions will appear on the agenda of international bodies. The evolution of journalism, with its trend towards systemisation, and rationalisation in the organisation of work, seem to point in t h a t direction. I n the case of weekly rest an immediate agreement would be easier to achieve. There is an increasing tendency, discernible not only in collective agreements but also in legislation, to apply to journalists the general principle of weekly rest, from which they were formerly excluded. I t appeared as though the daily paper must for ever deprive them of this rest, but events have not justified these apprehensions, and it has become apparent that, without in any way harming the interest of the Press, journalists could be given what hardly anyone but they were lacking, namely one day's rest a week to recuperate their strength. Hence an international agreement could quite well be concluded on the subject. As far as most countries are concerned it would merely sanction an existing state of affairs, and the others could doubtless bring themselves into line without much difficulty. We have also shown how necessary annual leave is in a profession so exhausting as journalism. The necessity is being realised to an increasing extent by the employers, b u t it is incontestable t h a t in many places the subject has not received sufficient attention. The example set by certain countries may be of great use ; it is sure to be followed in others as journalism develops. I n any case, it is improbable t h a t the question could be brought up for official international consideration independently of the general problem of paid holidays. For the moment it is a question t o be dealt with more especially by the Press associations. To sum u p : a t the present time there are two kinds of problems which the evolution of journalism raises, and which stand in need of solution by reason of its progressive transformation into a more clearly defined profession ; there are general problems common to all workers, manual or intellectual, and there are problems peculiar to the profession. All are, in differing degrees, suitable for international treatment ; some in the distant future, others, two or three in number, at the present time. Among the latter, in the group of questions relating to working conditions proper, weekly rest comes first, and in the group relating to security of tenure, the group t h a t for the moment lends itself more easily to examination from the international point of view, the most important questions are those relating to termination of services, methods of finding — 211 — employment, and special jurisdiction. At least one is fully ripe for discussion ; the others soon will be. At all events the creation of an Advisory Committee on Intellectual Workers in connection with the International Labour Office is a guarantee to journalists, as it is to their colleagues in other professions, that their demands will be given a direct hearing, and that the problems that are fit for an international solution will be submitted to the competent bodies and examined. APPENDIXES APPENDIX A A comparison of wages expressed in different national currencies is not possible except when their real value, or purchasing power, is known exactly in each case. The essential data for such a calculation are, however, not all available. The table that follows, if used with caution, will nevertheless enable the reader to form an approximate idea of the relative value of the wages quoted. This table has been compiled with the help of the statistical information used by the International Labour Office for the quarterly statements in the International Labour Review of comparative figures of real wages in a number of large towns. For this purpose the cost in each town of a "basket of provisions" 1, consisting of the more usual foodstuffs, is calculated from the statistics of retail prices, care being taken to weight the prices of the various articles in accordance with their importance in family budgets. The figures obtained cannot be used to ascertain with accuracy the financial position of journalists in the various countries because, in the first place, the nature and quantity of foodstuffs consumed vary from country to country, and secondly, because the figures relate only to a certain number of foodstuffs, and do not throw any light on the cost of heating, lighting, clothing, and rent, or on a number of other expenses. In spite of these considerable lacunae, the table may be of some use in comparing, in a very general fashion, the salaries of journalists in different countries. The cost of a "basket of provisions " in January 1928, based on prices in the respective capitals, was as follows : Austria 12.37 schillings Belgium 44.76 francs Czechoslovakia 2 45.55 crowns France . 37.60 francs Germany 7.56 marks Great Britain 7s. 2d. Italy . . 31.25 lire Netherlands 3.77 florins Poland . 11.42 zloty Portugal 32.44 escudos Spain 11.62 pesetas Sweden . 6.82 crowns United States (P hila delp hia) 2.24 dollars 1 This basket of provisions is itself the average of six different baskets. For further details of the statistical methods employed, cf. International Labour Review, Vol. X , No. 4, Oct. 1924. * April 1928. — 216 — These prices enable the following table to be compiled ; its simpler figures will facilitate comparison. In January 1928 the quantities of foodstuffs entering into the composition of the " basket of provisions ", and obtainable in Great Britain for £ 1 , cost in Approximately 1 Austria 35 schillings Belgium 125 francs Czechoslovakia1 . . . 1 2 8 crowns France 105 francs Germany 21 marks Italy . . ' . . . . 88 lire Netherlands . . . 11 florins Poland 32 zloty Portugal 91 escudos Spain 33 pesetas Sweden 19 crowns United States (Philadelphia) 6.25 dollars April 1928. APPENDIX B Questionnaire concerning Conditions of Existence among Journalists Preliminary Note. — The following questionnaire is intended to apply to professional journalists, editors, sub-editors, correspondents, and contributors of newspapers, reporters, etc. I. — LEGAL STATUS OF THE PRESS 1. What legal provisions must be complied with in your country in order to acquire the right to found and conduct ,a newspaper ? 2. What legal responsibilities are incurred by the authors of articles, managers and printers ? 3. What administrative sanctions can the authorities apply ? 4. What supervision is exercised in matters of professional honour by Press associations and directors of newspapers ? I I . — T H E LABOUR MARKET 1. Finding employment. Are there any institutions in your country engaged in finding employment for journalists ? (a) Private offices ; (b) Offices connected with organisations ; (c) Public offices. What are these institutions ? Under what conditions do they carry out their functions ? 2. Unemployment. (a) Is there any unemployment among journalists in your country ? (b) Is there any seasonal unemployment ? 3. Employment of Women. Please state : (a) The number of women engaged in the profession and the proportion they bear to the number of men ; (b) The kind of work which they prefer ; (c) Whether the conditions of employment for men and women are identical. 4. Employment of Foreigners. (a) What is the number of foreigners in the profession in your country and what proportion does it bear to the number of natives ? Has the number increased or decreased since 1914 ? (b) Are the conditions of work for foreigners the same as those for natives ? — 218 — 5. Glasses of Employment. (a) Are there in your country different professional classes among journalists and are these explicitly distinguished in contracts ? (b) If so, what are these classes ? III. — CONTRACTS OF SERVICE 1. Legal provisions. (a) What legal provisions are in force in your country in relation to the formation and contents of individual contracts ? (b) What is the usual duration of such contracts ? (c) What are the conditions of termination ? 2. Model Contracts. (a) Are there any model forms of contract in general use ? (b) If so, what clauses do they contain ? 3. Collective Agreements. (a) Have any collective agreements been entered into between associations of newspaper proprietors and professional organisations of journalists ? (b) If so, what clauses do they contain ? 4. Settlement of Disputes. What is the procedure generally adopted in case of disputes ? IV. — CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT 1. Are there any laws or administrative orders in your country regulating conditions of employment among journalists ? If so, what are the provisions contained therein in regard to the following : (a) Hours of work ; (b) Nightwork ; (c) Weekly rest (if a weekly rest exists, is it secured by reduction or suppression of newspapers on one day in the week ?) ; (d) Holidays ; (e) Conditions as to health and safety. 2. Are there any uniform rules consecrated by custom relating to the conditions of employment among journalists ? What rules of this kind are there in relation to the points enumerated under (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e) in the last question ? 3. In the absence of uniform rules what is the current practice on these points ? 4. Have these various conditions of employment been modified since 1914 and in what manner ? V. — 1. REMUNERATION Remuneration. What, in practice, are the remunerations of the various classes of journalists in your country' ? Please state : (a) What classes receive a fixed salary and the rate of such salary per month ? (b) Any other methods of remuneration ? (c) How are reporting expenses and travelling expenses in the country and abroad paid ? — 219 — 2. Modifications. What changes have these remunerations undergone since 1914, either in absolute amount or in relation to printers' wages and the cost of living. 3. Expenses. What expense is involved in the purchase of the newspapers and books and the subscription to the reviews required by journalists for the purposes of their work ? VI. — PROVIDENT INSTITUTIONS 1. What provident, insurance or relief institutions exist for the benefit of journalists and their families in case of : fa) Sickness ; fb) Accident ; (c) Unemployment ; (d) Death ? ' What is the proportion of the number of members of such institutions to the total number of members of the profession ? 2. (a) Under what conditions do journalists participate in these institutions (compulsory membership, optional member. ship, etc.) ? fb) Is there any system of insurance securing to journalists of the classes under consideration a pension on retirement or compensation in case of dimissal ? 3. Is the position of journalists in relation to the above institutions different from that of industrial workers and in what respect ? VII. — ORGANISATIONS OF THE PROFESSION 1. Are there in your country any organisations of journalists for the protection of the interests of the profession ? 2. Journalists' organisations, which, for a long time possessed the character of organisations for mutual assistance, are now engaged in the protection of the professional interests of their members. Are these organisations associated with the trade union movement or with associations of intellectual workers or of employers ? VIII. — GENERAL POSITION AND DEMANDS 1. What are the most serious disadvantages, economic and otherwise, from which journalists suffer at the present time ? 2. What reforms do they consider as urgent or desirable ? 3. What demands are they disposed to make ?