The media coverage of famine in Africa has been inextricably intertwined with politics and the use of aid. In the 30 years since the BBC famously reported famine in Ethiopia little, if anything, has changed about the media’s over-simplification of the subject
Insufficient information to predict famine was widely seen to be a central reason for the failure of...
Policy impact does not always arise as a primary objective of research. LSE’s Naomi Pendle, who has ...
The dissertation examines U.S. newspaper coverage of hunger occurring both in Africa and the United ...
Since the end of colonial rule, Africa has on the whole been inadequately covered by the western med...
By LSE MSc student Daniel Mebarek-Daza Stories and images of hunger, conflict and underdevelopment h...
The issue of poverty attracted international policy attention around the time when the UN system nam...
This study is intended to analyse how the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC), representing the...
Abstract: Ethiopian historiography corroborated that Ethiopia has a long trends of famines beginning...
There is widespread agreement among media analysts that the media in capitalist societies, such as A...
My conversation about humanitarian communication with the World Food Programme’s Greg Barrow was cut...
This dissertation combines ethnographic, interview, and documentary data gathered in Ethiopia to ana...
In 1983, a massive famine struck Ethiopia. Bred by a complex array of factors, thousands of men, wom...
Humanitarian journalism plays a crucial role in how citizens, aid workers and international organisa...
Western media reporting of disasters in faraway countries (especially in Africa) frequently follows ...
This article uses online news of the 2011 Somali famine, a humanitarian disaster, to investigate th...
Insufficient information to predict famine was widely seen to be a central reason for the failure of...
Policy impact does not always arise as a primary objective of research. LSE’s Naomi Pendle, who has ...
The dissertation examines U.S. newspaper coverage of hunger occurring both in Africa and the United ...
Since the end of colonial rule, Africa has on the whole been inadequately covered by the western med...
By LSE MSc student Daniel Mebarek-Daza Stories and images of hunger, conflict and underdevelopment h...
The issue of poverty attracted international policy attention around the time when the UN system nam...
This study is intended to analyse how the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC), representing the...
Abstract: Ethiopian historiography corroborated that Ethiopia has a long trends of famines beginning...
There is widespread agreement among media analysts that the media in capitalist societies, such as A...
My conversation about humanitarian communication with the World Food Programme’s Greg Barrow was cut...
This dissertation combines ethnographic, interview, and documentary data gathered in Ethiopia to ana...
In 1983, a massive famine struck Ethiopia. Bred by a complex array of factors, thousands of men, wom...
Humanitarian journalism plays a crucial role in how citizens, aid workers and international organisa...
Western media reporting of disasters in faraway countries (especially in Africa) frequently follows ...
This article uses online news of the 2011 Somali famine, a humanitarian disaster, to investigate th...
Insufficient information to predict famine was widely seen to be a central reason for the failure of...
Policy impact does not always arise as a primary objective of research. LSE’s Naomi Pendle, who has ...
The dissertation examines U.S. newspaper coverage of hunger occurring both in Africa and the United ...