04833nam 22007333u 450 991078255110332120230616111957.01-281-95304-00-335-23673-1(CKB)1000000000577964(EBL)409756(OCoLC)371197401(SSID)ssj0000163271(PQKBManifestationID)11167098(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000163271(PQKBWorkID)10105862(PQKB)10600982(MiAaPQ)EBC409756(EXLCZ)99100000000057796420130923d2008|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtccrGlobal Crisis Reporting[electronic resource]Maidenhead McGraw-Hill Education20081 online resource (215 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-335-22138-6 Front cover; Half tittle; Series Editor; Tittle; Copyright page; Contents; Acknowledgements; Series Editor's Foreword; Chapter 1 Global crisis? what crisis?; Global crises: eight moments; Chapter 2 Journalism in the global age; International communications and media globalization; News media as emissaries of global dominance; News media as emissaries of the global public sphere; Peripheral visions and professional preoccupations; Peripheral visions; Professional preoccupations and practices; The demise of foreign correspondence?; Emergent new(s) trajectories in the research fieldMediating global crisesTheorizing contingency and complexity; Chapter 3 ( U N ) Natural disasters: the calculus of death and the ritualization of catastrophe; Geopolitics and the calculus of death; The ritualization of catastrophe and the politics of despair; The South Asian tsunami: rituals of solidarity and the 'Cruel Sea'; Hurricane Katrina: disaster myths and the ritualization of dissent; (Un)natural disasters as global focusing events; Chapter 4 Ecology and climate change: from science and sceptic to spectacle and . . .; Environmental reporting: what's knownClimate change: science and scepticsClimate change: spectacle and . . .; Chapter 5 Forced migrations and human rights: antinomies in the mediates ethics of care; News, migrants and collective problematization: threecase studies; A different story: journalism and the mediated ethics of care; Human rights on the news agenda; Chapter 6 New wars and the global war on terror: on vicarious, visceral violence; Communicating war: controls and contingencies; Hidden wars, new wars; Information war and the new western way of war; Spectacle and the global war on terrorChapter 7 The 'cnn effect' and 'compassion fatigue' : researching beyond commonsenceThe CNN effect: too good to be true?; Compassion fatigue: too bad to be right?; Chapter 8 Humanitarian ngos, news media and the changing relations of communicative power; Humanitarian NGOs in the global age; Aid NGOs in interaction with the news media; The crowded aid field and organizational branding; Packaging media reports and facilitating the field; Regionalizing 'global' humanitarianism; Risk, reputation and mediated scandals; Make Poverty History: campaign dilemmas behind the scenesNew communication technologies: reconfiguringcommunicative powerChapter 9 Global crisis reporting : conclusion; Researching complexity and contingenc; Global crises, nations and public sphere(s); Glosary; References; Index; Back coverClimate change and threats to the planet's ecology, the 'global war on terror' and various forms of warfare and humanitarian emergencies and struggles for human rights - these, and other, global crises represent the dark side of our globalizing world. This work examines the media's involvement in some of the most humanly pressing global crises.Communication, InternationalCrisesGlobalizationMass mediaJournalism & CommunicationsHILCCSociology & Social HistoryHILCCSocial SciencesHILCCSocial ChangeHILCCJournalismHILCCCommunication, International.Crises.Globalization.Mass media.Journalism & CommunicationsSociology & Social HistorySocial SciencesSocial ChangeJournalism070.4332303.485Cottle Simon945044AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910782551103321Global Crisis Reporting3671396UNINA