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This inductive study investigates the "curricula" of ten different
news organizations from seven different countries that produced
news in four languages on the Darfur uprising in Western Sudan: the
New York Times, the Washington Post, France's Le Monde, the UK's
Guardian, BBC.co.uk, Egypt's Al-Ahram, South Africa's Mail &
Guardian Online, English.AlJazeera.Net, and China's People's Daily
and China Daily. Mody and her collaborators show how news
organizations uniquely and strategically constructed a foreign
event for a particular intended audience based on national
historical solidarity with global North or South power blocs,
current national interest in the country, ownership of the news
organization, and the political-linguistic constituency of the
intended audience. While previous research on the role of national
interest and ownership are supported in this study, the influence
of the intended audience (namely, foreign or domestic) on the
design of news is a new contribution to the field. Conceptualizing
foreign news as perhaps the only means of cross-national,
continuing education, Mody uses comprehensiveness as an evaluative
measure of news. The Geopolitics of Representation in Foreign News
provides unique insights that will be of particular interest to
those researchers working in the field of international journalism.
To reshape the field of development communication, Redeveloping
Communication for Social Change proposes situating theory and
practice within contexts of power, recognizing both the ability of
dominant groups to control and the potential for marginal
communities to resist. Contributors from communication and
anthropology explore the global and institutional structures within
which agencies construct social problems and interventions, the
discourse guiding the normative climate for conceiving and
implementing projects, and the practice of strategic interventions
for social change. Examining early and emerging models of
development, power dynamics, ethnographic approaches, gender
issues, and information technologies, they speculate how a
framework accounting for power might contribute toward new
directions and applications in the field. Instead of mourning the
demise of development communication, this volume should provoke
critical debate that will help us change our approaches to meet new
challenges.
This volume brings together scholars and policymakers to address
the issue of telecommunications policy in developing countries. It
elaborates on the position that economics and technology determine
the framework for discussion, but politics makes the decision.
Politics, in this case, refers to the dynamics of the power
structure generated by the historical and contemporary context of
state, social, economic, and cultural forces. The chapter authors
address the system of information transportation -- the
telecommunications sector in developing countries ranging from
low-income countries with overburdened, rural roads in south Asia
and Africa trying to catch up to digitalized fibre-optic
superhighways in middle income countries such as Singapore.
The organization of the book reflects a contextually situated
intellectual viewpoint. The first part presents a historical and
conceptual introduction to changes in the organization of
telecommunications. The second part analyzes the major external and
internal forces that have influenced the process of private sector
participation in telecommunications. The third part offers ten
comparative country case studies that provide evidence of the
diverse conditions, goals, and processes of the realignment of
public and private tasks in the telecommunications industry.
Finally, contributors address the issue of regulation from
differing positions -- a pragmatic, "how-to-cope" discussion for
developing country decision makers.
The diverse perspectives in this volume should provide help to
developing countries in their struggle with proposals received from
international banks, private investors, interested "big powers,"
and their consulting firms.
This volume brings together scholars and policymakers to address
the issue of telecommunications policy in developing countries. It
elaborates on the position that economics and technology determine
the framework for discussion, but politics makes the decision.
Politics, in this case, refers to the dynamics of the power
structure generated by the historical and contemporary context of
state, social, economic, and cultural forces. The chapter authors
address the system of information transportation -- the
telecommunications sector in developing countries ranging from
low-income countries with overburdened, rural roads in south Asia
and Africa trying to catch up to digitalized fibre-optic
superhighways in middle income countries such as Singapore.
The organization of the book reflects a contextually situated
intellectual viewpoint. The first part presents a historical and
conceptual introduction to changes in the organization of
telecommunications. The second part analyzes the major external and
internal forces that have influenced the process of private sector
participation in telecommunications. The third part offers ten
comparative country case studies that provide evidence of the
diverse conditions, goals, and processes of the realignment of
public and private tasks in the telecommunications industry.
Finally, contributors address the issue of regulation from
differing positions -- a pragmatic, "how-to-cope" discussion for
developing country decision makers.
The diverse perspectives in this volume should provide help to
developing countries in their struggle with proposals received from
international banks, private investors, interested "big powers,"
and their consulting firms.
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Gaap
Marco Viale
Hardcover
R167
Discovery Miles 1 670
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