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E-raamat: Media and Aid in Sub-Saharan Africa: Whose News?

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News coverage on Africa is closely connected not only with how Western audiences see the continent, but also with how a wide Western audience builds its opinion on issues that carry consequences for the public's and governments' support and policy towards development aid. The Western media reinforces a picture of a continent that drowns in chaos, is dominated by conflicts, diseases, corruption and failed democratisation. Whose interests lie behind that? How does foreign news on sub-Saharan Africa emerge, which actors are relevant in its making, and on the basis of what interests do these actors shape the coverage that is then presented as 'neutral information' to a broad international audience?

Closely examining the relationship between foreign correspondents of international news media and humanitarian organisations, Lena Von Naso shows how the aid and media sectors cooperate in a way in Africa in a unique way. Based on more than 70 interviews with foreign correspondents and aid workers operating across Africa, the book argues that the changing nature of foreign news and of aid is forcing them to form a deep co-dependency that is having a serious and largely unnoticed effect on Western news coverage.

This comprehensive examination of a new paradigm will interest students and scholars of media and journalism, African Studies, development and humanitarian studies and the aid and media communities operating

Figures and tables
ix
Preface xi
Preface in German xiii
Selected acronyms xv
Acknowledgement xvii
1 Introduction: coverage of Africa, foreign correspondents and humanitarian organisations
1(19)
1.1 Research interest and hypotheses
7(3)
1.2 Overview of research design and data
10(10)
2 State of research
20(9)
3 Theoretical concepts
29(19)
3.1 One single theory of journalism?
29(2)
3.2 What reality does journalism display?
31(3)
3.3 Theories of news selection
34(3)
3.4 Methodological individualism and its combination with network analysis
37(11)
4 Media and aid -- sectors and actors: basic assumptions
48(50)
4.1 Foreign correspondents as political actors
48(11)
4.2 Based in sub-Saharan Africa
59(5)
4.3 The relationship between journalism and public relations
64(4)
4.4 Humanitarian organisations -- roles and tasks
68(11)
4.5 Embedded journalism --- embedded with the military and embedded with the humanitarian sector?
79(19)
5 Research design and methodology
98(20)
6 Research findings
118(133)
6.1 Framework and conditions defining the interactions -- journalists
118(25)
6.2 Framework and conditions defining the interactions -- humanitarian organisations
143(20)
6.3 Overview of the interactions
163(19)
6.4 Challenges in the interactions
182(7)
6.5 Importance of the interactions
189(11)
6.6 Contextualising aid embedding in the light of the research results
200(13)
6.7 Influence on coverage
213(28)
6.8 Blurring of lines
241(10)
7 Summary and conclusion
251(10)
8 Outlook
261(3)
Index 264(3)
Annex 267
Lena von Naso received her PhD in Political Science, Peace and Conflict Studies at Augsburg University, Germany in 2016.