Human rights journalism: advances in reporting distant humanitarian interventions

Human rights journalism: advances in reporting distant humanitarian interventions

Shaw, Ibrahim Seaga

71,83 €(IVA inc.)

Shaw argues that journalism should focus on deconstructing the underlying structural and cultural causes of political violence such as poverty, famine and human trafficking, and play a proactive (preventative), rather than reactive (prescriptive) role in humanitarian intervention. IBRAHIM SEAGA SHAW is Senior Lecturer at the University of Northumbria, UK. With a background in journalism spanning 26 years in Sierra Leone, Britain and France, he edited Sierra Leone's award winning 'Expo Times' newspaper in the mid 1990s. He holds a PhD from the Sorbonne and is co-editor of 'Expanding Peace Journalism' (2011). INDICE: Acknowledgements - Preface - Foreword; 'S.Allan - 'Introduction: Background and Scope of Human Rights Journalism - PART I - Human Rights Journalism and Alternative Models: Critical Conceptual and Comparative Perspectives -Human Rights Journalism: A Conceptual Framework - Critical Comparative Analyses of Human Rights Journalism and Peace Journalism, Global Journalism and Human Rights Reporting - Public, Citizen and Peace Journalisms: Towards the More Radical Human Rights Journalism Strand - The Dynamics and Challenges of Reporting Humanitarian Interventions - PART II - Human Rights Journalism in the Reporting of Physical Violence - The 'us only' and 'us+them' Frames in Reporting the Sierra Leone War: Implications for Human Rghts Journalism - 'Operation Restore Hope' in Somalia and Genocide in Rwanda - Politics of Humanitarian Intervention and Human Wrongs Journalism: The Case of Kosovo Vs Sierra Leone - PART III - Human Rights Journalism and the Representing of Structural and Cultural Violence - The Politics of Development and Global Poverty Eradication - The 2007EU-Africa Lisbon Summit and 'the Global Partnership for Africa' - The Reporting of Asylum Seekers and Refugees in the UK - Conclusion: A Case for Human Rights Journalism and Future Directions - Afterword; 'J.Lynch' - Index

  • ISBN: 978-0-230-32142-7
  • Editorial: Palgrave MacM
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 304
  • Fecha Publicación: 18/11/2011
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés