We use the mediated debate on the Kony 2012 campaign as a case study to explore whether and how traditional and new media practices enable sufferers of humanitarian conflicts to find a voice and to be listened to in both the local and international news media. Within the context of political voice, we emphasise political voice as a social process that involves not only speaking, but also the right to be listened to and to be engaged in conversation. The empirical material for this study consists of a selection of Ugandan newspapers and social media platforms, as well as a selection of international newspapers. Media texts related to the Kony 2012 campaign during the 2 months following the launch of the campaign were singled out and studied ...
The Invisible Children Kony campaign has succeeded in one important thing. It has sparked a global d...
In 1994 Rwanda, some journalists used their power for evil when government-run media houses perpetra...
This paper examines the nature and impacts of two information intervention radio programmes broadcas...
An analysis of the Kony 2012 phenomenon to illustrate how a digital campaign can validate and reprod...
A global discourse on cosmopolitan humanism can become tragically disconnected from how it plays out...
ABSTRACT On March 5, 2012, a US-based group called Invisible Children posted a video online, “KONY 2...
The article discusses political activism in Uganda and the role of social media. It focuses on two s...
International audienceThis article analyses the uses of the 'community' and 'peace media' labels in ...
This study aims firstly at reviewing the transition to multi-party politics in Uganda after 20 years...
This paper investigates to what extent the ‘Propaganda Model’, which Edward S. Herman and Noam Choms...
Abstract The main import of this case study is to understand how community radio has contributed to...
The paper explores how peace journalism has been applied in Uganda basing on an assessment of findin...
Abstract The law of unintended consequences, often cited but rarely defined, is that actions of p...
Radio was used to incite hatred in the build up to the genocide in Rwanda. But today the medium prom...
Frustrated by the lack of mainstream media attention, international human rights organizations are u...
The Invisible Children Kony campaign has succeeded in one important thing. It has sparked a global d...
In 1994 Rwanda, some journalists used their power for evil when government-run media houses perpetra...
This paper examines the nature and impacts of two information intervention radio programmes broadcas...
An analysis of the Kony 2012 phenomenon to illustrate how a digital campaign can validate and reprod...
A global discourse on cosmopolitan humanism can become tragically disconnected from how it plays out...
ABSTRACT On March 5, 2012, a US-based group called Invisible Children posted a video online, “KONY 2...
The article discusses political activism in Uganda and the role of social media. It focuses on two s...
International audienceThis article analyses the uses of the 'community' and 'peace media' labels in ...
This study aims firstly at reviewing the transition to multi-party politics in Uganda after 20 years...
This paper investigates to what extent the ‘Propaganda Model’, which Edward S. Herman and Noam Choms...
Abstract The main import of this case study is to understand how community radio has contributed to...
The paper explores how peace journalism has been applied in Uganda basing on an assessment of findin...
Abstract The law of unintended consequences, often cited but rarely defined, is that actions of p...
Radio was used to incite hatred in the build up to the genocide in Rwanda. But today the medium prom...
Frustrated by the lack of mainstream media attention, international human rights organizations are u...
The Invisible Children Kony campaign has succeeded in one important thing. It has sparked a global d...
In 1994 Rwanda, some journalists used their power for evil when government-run media houses perpetra...
This paper examines the nature and impacts of two information intervention radio programmes broadcas...