The severity and frequency of threats in Ireland are generally lower than in many other countries, reflected in its overall position. It is broadly a safe country in which journalists can operate, particularly in terms of physical safety. However, the ranking dips when it comes to psychological safety, which may be explained by the legal landscape: defamation laws remain problematic and can have a silencing effect on journalists. Although reform is planned, at present journalists and news organisations must regularly deal with legal threats and cases which can also have significant financial repercussions for the outlet. Elsewhere, although Ireland's digital safety ranking is more positive, there has been evidence of anti-journalistic sentiment and targeting of journalists online, based on both topics (eg, Covid-19 pandemic, immigration) and attacks on them personally, or towards their outlet, with mainstream organisations frequently discredited online by those on the political extremes. Ultimately, we can see that some media professionals report self-censorship due to fear of consequences, both in a legal context and from hostile online users.
This radar chart displays how the country performs across all four safety dimensions, revealing areas of strength and concern.
This comparison highlights differences in safety experiences between male and female journalists, revealing potential gender-based disparities.
The physical dimension carries 50% weight in the safety index. Read the methodology in full.
This figure represents the total number of journalist killings in Ireland between 2016 and 2024.
Data sourced from UNESCO Observatory of Killed Journalists.
Note: This indicator carries 35% of the weight within the physical dimension of the Safety Index, making it the most significant factor in this category.
The psychological dimension carries 25% weight in the safety index. Read the methodology in full.
The digital dimension carries 12.5% weight in the safety index. Read the methodology in full.
The financial dimension carries 12.5% weight in the safety index. Read the methodology in full.
This section contains demographic information about survey respondents from Ireland.
Demographic information about survey respondents will be available in a future update.