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Global Crisis Reporting


Global Crisis Reporting

Paperback by Cottle, Simon

Global Crisis Reporting

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£24.79

ISBN:
9780335221387
Publication Date:
16 Dec 2008
Language:
English
Publisher:
Open University Press
Pages:
192 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 24 - 26 May 2024
Global Crisis Reporting

Description

What are 'global crises' and how do they differ from earlier crises?What do recent studies of global crises reporting tell us about the role of the news media in the global age?What are the current trends in the fields of journalism and civil society that are now re-shaping the public communication of crises? From climate change to the global war on terror, from forced migration to humanitarian disasters - these are just some of the global crises addressed in this accessible, ground-breaking book. For the first time, the author situates diverse threats to humanity in a global context and examines how, why and to what extent they are conveyed in today's news media. Global crises are conceived as the dark side of a globalizing world, but how they become reported and constituted in the news media can also help sustain emergent forms of global awareness, global citizenship and global civil society.The book: Draws on original research and scholarship in the field of media and communications Deliberately moves beyond nationally confined research studies Examines diverse global crises and their communicative politics Recognizes global crises and their constitution within global news reporting as defining characteristics of the global age Global Crisis Reporting is key reading for students in media, communications, globalization and journalism studies.

Contents

1. Global crisis, what crisis? 2. Journalism in the global age 3. (Un)natural disasters: The calculus of death and the ritualization of catastrophe 4. Ecology and climate change: From science and sceptics to spectacle and... 5. Forced migrations and human rights: Antinomies in the mediated ethics of care 6. New wars and the global war on terror: On vicarious, visceral violence 7. The 'CNN effect' and 'compassion fatigue': Researching beyond commonsense 8. Humanitarian NGOs, news media and the changing relations of communicative power 9. Global crisis reporting: Conclusions Glossary

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