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Who's Reporting Africa Now?

Non-Governmental Organizations, Journalists, and Multimedia

by Kate Wright (Author)
©2018 Textbook XVI, 280 Pages

Summary

As news organizations cut correspondent posts and foreign bureaux, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have begun to expand into news reporting. Why and how do journalists use the photographs, video, and audio that NGOs produce? What effects does this have on the kinds of stories told about Africa? And how have these developments changed the nature of journalism and NGO-work?
Who’s Reporting Africa Now?: Non-Governmental Organizations, Journalists, and Multimedia is the first book to address these questions—using frank interviews and internal documents to shed light on the workings of major news organizations and NGOs, collaborating with one another in specific news production processes. These contrasting case studies are used to illuminate the complex moral and political economies underpinning such journalism, involving not only NGO press officers and journalists but also field workers, freelancers, private foundations, social media participants, businesspeople, and advertising executives.

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • Advance Praise for Who’s Reporting Africa Now?
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Chapter 1. Introduction
  • Chapter 2. NGOs, News Organizations, and Freelancers : An Overview
  • Chapter 3. “Good” Journalism and Moral Economies
  • Chapter 4. Photojournalism, Professionalism, and Print Newspapers: The Independent on Sunday and Christian Aid
  • Chapter 5. War Crimes, Witnessing, and Public Service Television: Channel 4 News and Human Rights Watch
  • Chapter 6. Online Slideshows, “Selling In”, and Moral Education: BBC News Online and Save the Children
  • Chapter 7. Digital Dialogue, International Development, and Blogging: The Guardian and Internews
  • Chapter 8. African Self-Help, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Positive Features: The Observer and the Kenyan Paraplegic Organization
  • Chapter 9. Conclusion
  • Index

Kate Wright

Who’s Reporting Africa Now?

Non-Governmental Organizations,
Journalists, and Multimedia

About the author

An award-winning journalist, Kate Wright worked on the BBC’s Africa desk. After gaining her PhD at Goldsmiths College, University of London, she took up a position as Chancellor’s Fellow in the Cultural and Creative Industries at the University of Edinburgh.

About the book

As news organizations cut correspondent posts and foreign bureaux, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have begun to expand into news reporting. Why and how do journalists use the photographs, video, and audio that NGOs produce? What effects does this have on the kinds of stories told about Africa? And how have these developments changed the nature of journalism and NGO-work?

Who’s Reporting Africa Now?: Non-Governmental Organizations, Journalists, and Multimedia is the first book to address these questions—using frank interviews and internal documents to shed light on the workings of major news organizations and NGOs, collaborating with one another in specific news production processes. These contrasting case studies are used to illuminate the complex moral and political economies underpinning such journalism, involving not only NGO press officers and journalists but also field workers, freelancers, private foundations, social media participants, businesspeople, and advertising executives.

Advance Praise for

Who’s Reporting Africa Now?

“This is a unique book that goes beyond any other in exploring how journalists and NGOs produce knowledge about Africa in today’s multimedia environment. With a sharp eye on the changing contexts and interactions of all relevant actors, it gives an illuminating account of the ‘moral economies’ of journalism about Africa, animating the complex struggles of media producers and reflecting on what these may mean for the ways we learn about and understand Africa today. A valuable read.”

—Lilie Chouliaraki, Chair in Media and Communications,
London School of Economics

“Who’s Reporting Africa Now? traces the increasingly influential role of NGOs in shaping the story about Africa in global media. Kate Wright draws on her own extensive experience as a journalist as well as empirical research into a range of media, from legacy platforms to online outlets, to provide a persuasive account of the interactions between journalists and NGOs and the moral and political economies underpinning these complex relationships. The book breaks new ground in exploring political and ethical questions at the heart of global journalism in a changing media landscape, and in so doing, it contributes to the building of theory about journalism in and about Africa.”

—Herman Wasserman, Professor of Media Studies, University of Cape Town

“Journalism is a much more complex, mixed, and altogether messy form of media work than it is generally made out to be. Kate Wright offers a critical yet respectful view of what this means in both theory and practice. What a great read!”

—Mark Deuze, Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam

“Who’s Reporting Africa Now? is a fascinating journey behind the scenes of the production of contemporary representations of Africa. Thanks to Kate Wright’s unique access and understanding of the news industry, the book unravels a captivating media ecology where NGOs and journalists engage in complicated exchanges, not only with each other but also with freelancers, private foundations, and PR agencies and social media participants. In so doing, Wright offers compelling evidence to understand how NGOs have come to play such a central role in the production of visual images of Africa. With tremendous energy, the book successfully articulates and combines a wide range of debates and literature from African studies, international development, media studies, and cultural and creative industries. The book will be a terrific opportunity for African studies readers to reconsider the key debates over Africa’s image in an increasingly mediatized world.”

—Toussaint Nothias, Lecturer in African Studies, Stanford University

“This book has so many strengths. It is superbly written, as you might hope for from a former journalist. It significantly advances understanding of news and journalism, via excellent empirical case studies. Yet it also makes a major contribution to ethical thinking about the contemporary media via its skillful use of the concept of moral economy.”

—David Hesmondhalgh, Professor of Media, Music and Culture,
University of Leeds

“Kate Wright’s Who’s Reporting Africa Now? is a clear and thought-provoking work on the connections between NGOs, journalists, and news organizations. Using a case-studies approach, the book, the first of its kind, analyzes how multiple media producers within and outside of sub-Saharan African countries shape the production of international news about Africa. The book moves the study of NGO-journalist relations in a new theoretical direction using moral economy theory and contributes directly to our understanding of complicated international news production practices. I highly recommend this book, particularly for students and scholars interested in journalism, media studies, international politics, and sociology.”

—Shakuntala Rao, Professor of Communication Studies,
State University of New York

“To understand the moral economies of solidifying power in media representations of Africa, read Kate Wright’s book. Who’s Reporting Africa Now? is a detailed analysis of the production of ‘Africa’ in our contemporary world of social media and the widespread casualization of media production. Wright provides a deep understanding of the structural factors that bring forth relationships between freelancers and international NGOs and charts their struggles to produce ‘good’ journalism within these constraints. The book benefits from insider knowledge and an engaged writing style attributable to the author’s own lived experience as a journalist. Scholars and practitioners eager to understand the realities of the new actors and alliances shaping development and humanitarianism today must read this book.”

—Lisa Ann Richey, Professor of International Development, Roskilde University

This eBook can be cited

This edition of the eBook can be cited. To enable this we have marked the start and end of a page. In cases where a word straddles a page break, the marker is placed inside the word at exactly the same position as in the physical book. This means that occasionally a word might be bifurcated by this marker.

Preface

I remember vividly the day I first used multimedia from a Non-Governmental Organization. It was back in 2003, when I was a journalist working on Newshour, the English-language flagship for BBC World Service Radio. My editor was emphatically not a morning person. He was slumped at his desk, mainlining strong coffee and trying to make it through the pre-dawn editorial meeting with at least a modicum of courtesy. “The thing is Kate”, he explained in a long-suffering manner, “war in the Congo is not new. Millions of people have been dying there for seven bloody years, so why cover it today? What’s new?”

Details

Pages
XVI, 280
Year
2018
ISBN (PDF)
9781433151057
ISBN (ePUB)
9781433151064
ISBN (MOBI)
9781433151071
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433151040
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433151033
DOI
10.3726/b12613
Language
English
Publication date
2018 (May)
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Oxford, Wien, 2018. XVI, 280 pp., 6 coloured ill.

Biographical notes

Kate Wright (Author)

An award-winning journalist, Kate Wright worked on the BBC’s Africa desk. After gaining her PhD at Goldsmiths College, University of London, she took up a position as Chancellor’s Fellow in the Cultural and Creative Industries at the University of Edinburgh.

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298 pages