Communication and Peace
Mapping an emerging field
Herausgeber: Hoffmann, Julia; Hawkins, Virgil
Communication and Peace
Mapping an emerging field
Herausgeber: Hoffmann, Julia; Hawkins, Virgil
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This interdisciplinary edited volume provides a state-of-the-art overview and analysis of the use of communication in resolving conflicts, with a focus on de-escalation and processes of peacebuilding and peace formation.
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This interdisciplinary edited volume provides a state-of-the-art overview and analysis of the use of communication in resolving conflicts, with a focus on de-escalation and processes of peacebuilding and peace formation.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 348
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 161mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 661g
- ISBN-13: 9781138018044
- ISBN-10: 113801804X
- Artikelnr.: 40496484
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 348
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 161mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 661g
- ISBN-13: 9781138018044
- ISBN-10: 113801804X
- Artikelnr.: 40496484
Julia Hoffmann is Senior Advisor ICT & Media at Hivos, The Netherlands and Assistant Professor of Human Rights, Media and Conflict at the UN-mandated University for Peace in Costa Rica. She is co-editor (with Andre Nollkaemper) of The Responsibility to Protect: From Principle to Practice (2012). Virgil Hawkins is Associate Professor at Osaka School of International Public Policy (OSIPP) at Osaka University, Japan and research associate at the University of the Free State, South Africa. He is author of Stealth Conflicts: How the World's Worst Violence Is Ignored (2010).
Foreword, Oliver Richmond Introduction. Julia Hoffmann and Virgil Hawkins
1. Media in Peace and Conflict Studies, Jake Lynch 2. Media Studies and the
Peace Issue, Cees J. Hamelink PART I. Reporting and Representing Peace 3.
Peace and the Absence of Journalism, Virgil Hawkins 4. Conflict Sensitive
Journalism: (R)evolution in media peacebuilding, Ross Howard 5. The United
Nations' Responsibility to Protect and the World's Press: Establishing a
New Humanitarian Norm?, Simon Cottle and Martin Hughes 6. Media and War
Propaganda: The Value of Exposure, Oliver Boyd-Barrett 7. Imagined
Violence: Representations of Masculinity and a Culture of Peace, Lara
Mazurski 8. The Media and Deconstruction of the Enemy Image, Babak Bahador
PART II. Intervening for Peace 9. Still Caught in the Crossfire? UN Peace
Operations and their Information Capacities, Ingrid A. Lehmann 10. Beyond
Journalism: Expanding the use of media in peacebuilding, Vladimir Brati¿
11. UN Peacekeeping Radio: The Way Forward, Michelle Betz and Helene Papper
12. Reflections on Using Monitoring & Evaluation to Enhance Information
Interventions for Peace, Maureen Taylor 13. Digital Technology and Peace,
Steven Livingston 14. Strategic communications and the Avoidance of Violent
Conflict, Monroe E. Price and Nicole Stremlau 15. Capacity building,
institutional change and theories of change: Creating an enabling
environment for journalists in post-conflict environments, Michelle Betz
16. Confronting the conundrum of "hate speech", Julia Hoffmann 17. Media as
watchdogs and election monitors in fragile states: How foreign assistance
is shaping the media's role in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Marie-Soleil Frère PART III. Enacting and Communicating Peace 18.
The Role of the Media in Transitional Justice, Lisa J. Laplante 19.
Communication for Memory and Peace: Articulating Violence in
Post-Repressive Contexts, Kristin Sorensen 20. Community Media as
Performers of Peace, Clemencia Rodríguez 21. Communication Towards a
Negotiated Peace: Conflict, Contestation and the Media, Pradip Thomas
1. Media in Peace and Conflict Studies, Jake Lynch 2. Media Studies and the
Peace Issue, Cees J. Hamelink PART I. Reporting and Representing Peace 3.
Peace and the Absence of Journalism, Virgil Hawkins 4. Conflict Sensitive
Journalism: (R)evolution in media peacebuilding, Ross Howard 5. The United
Nations' Responsibility to Protect and the World's Press: Establishing a
New Humanitarian Norm?, Simon Cottle and Martin Hughes 6. Media and War
Propaganda: The Value of Exposure, Oliver Boyd-Barrett 7. Imagined
Violence: Representations of Masculinity and a Culture of Peace, Lara
Mazurski 8. The Media and Deconstruction of the Enemy Image, Babak Bahador
PART II. Intervening for Peace 9. Still Caught in the Crossfire? UN Peace
Operations and their Information Capacities, Ingrid A. Lehmann 10. Beyond
Journalism: Expanding the use of media in peacebuilding, Vladimir Brati¿
11. UN Peacekeeping Radio: The Way Forward, Michelle Betz and Helene Papper
12. Reflections on Using Monitoring & Evaluation to Enhance Information
Interventions for Peace, Maureen Taylor 13. Digital Technology and Peace,
Steven Livingston 14. Strategic communications and the Avoidance of Violent
Conflict, Monroe E. Price and Nicole Stremlau 15. Capacity building,
institutional change and theories of change: Creating an enabling
environment for journalists in post-conflict environments, Michelle Betz
16. Confronting the conundrum of "hate speech", Julia Hoffmann 17. Media as
watchdogs and election monitors in fragile states: How foreign assistance
is shaping the media's role in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Marie-Soleil Frère PART III. Enacting and Communicating Peace 18.
The Role of the Media in Transitional Justice, Lisa J. Laplante 19.
Communication for Memory and Peace: Articulating Violence in
Post-Repressive Contexts, Kristin Sorensen 20. Community Media as
Performers of Peace, Clemencia Rodríguez 21. Communication Towards a
Negotiated Peace: Conflict, Contestation and the Media, Pradip Thomas
Foreword, Oliver Richmond Introduction. Julia Hoffmann and Virgil Hawkins
1. Media in Peace and Conflict Studies, Jake Lynch 2. Media Studies and the
Peace Issue, Cees J. Hamelink PART I. Reporting and Representing Peace 3.
Peace and the Absence of Journalism, Virgil Hawkins 4. Conflict Sensitive
Journalism: (R)evolution in media peacebuilding, Ross Howard 5. The United
Nations' Responsibility to Protect and the World's Press: Establishing a
New Humanitarian Norm?, Simon Cottle and Martin Hughes 6. Media and War
Propaganda: The Value of Exposure, Oliver Boyd-Barrett 7. Imagined
Violence: Representations of Masculinity and a Culture of Peace, Lara
Mazurski 8. The Media and Deconstruction of the Enemy Image, Babak Bahador
PART II. Intervening for Peace 9. Still Caught in the Crossfire? UN Peace
Operations and their Information Capacities, Ingrid A. Lehmann 10. Beyond
Journalism: Expanding the use of media in peacebuilding, Vladimir Brati¿
11. UN Peacekeeping Radio: The Way Forward, Michelle Betz and Helene Papper
12. Reflections on Using Monitoring & Evaluation to Enhance Information
Interventions for Peace, Maureen Taylor 13. Digital Technology and Peace,
Steven Livingston 14. Strategic communications and the Avoidance of Violent
Conflict, Monroe E. Price and Nicole Stremlau 15. Capacity building,
institutional change and theories of change: Creating an enabling
environment for journalists in post-conflict environments, Michelle Betz
16. Confronting the conundrum of "hate speech", Julia Hoffmann 17. Media as
watchdogs and election monitors in fragile states: How foreign assistance
is shaping the media's role in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Marie-Soleil Frère PART III. Enacting and Communicating Peace 18.
The Role of the Media in Transitional Justice, Lisa J. Laplante 19.
Communication for Memory and Peace: Articulating Violence in
Post-Repressive Contexts, Kristin Sorensen 20. Community Media as
Performers of Peace, Clemencia Rodríguez 21. Communication Towards a
Negotiated Peace: Conflict, Contestation and the Media, Pradip Thomas
1. Media in Peace and Conflict Studies, Jake Lynch 2. Media Studies and the
Peace Issue, Cees J. Hamelink PART I. Reporting and Representing Peace 3.
Peace and the Absence of Journalism, Virgil Hawkins 4. Conflict Sensitive
Journalism: (R)evolution in media peacebuilding, Ross Howard 5. The United
Nations' Responsibility to Protect and the World's Press: Establishing a
New Humanitarian Norm?, Simon Cottle and Martin Hughes 6. Media and War
Propaganda: The Value of Exposure, Oliver Boyd-Barrett 7. Imagined
Violence: Representations of Masculinity and a Culture of Peace, Lara
Mazurski 8. The Media and Deconstruction of the Enemy Image, Babak Bahador
PART II. Intervening for Peace 9. Still Caught in the Crossfire? UN Peace
Operations and their Information Capacities, Ingrid A. Lehmann 10. Beyond
Journalism: Expanding the use of media in peacebuilding, Vladimir Brati¿
11. UN Peacekeeping Radio: The Way Forward, Michelle Betz and Helene Papper
12. Reflections on Using Monitoring & Evaluation to Enhance Information
Interventions for Peace, Maureen Taylor 13. Digital Technology and Peace,
Steven Livingston 14. Strategic communications and the Avoidance of Violent
Conflict, Monroe E. Price and Nicole Stremlau 15. Capacity building,
institutional change and theories of change: Creating an enabling
environment for journalists in post-conflict environments, Michelle Betz
16. Confronting the conundrum of "hate speech", Julia Hoffmann 17. Media as
watchdogs and election monitors in fragile states: How foreign assistance
is shaping the media's role in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Marie-Soleil Frère PART III. Enacting and Communicating Peace 18.
The Role of the Media in Transitional Justice, Lisa J. Laplante 19.
Communication for Memory and Peace: Articulating Violence in
Post-Repressive Contexts, Kristin Sorensen 20. Community Media as
Performers of Peace, Clemencia Rodríguez 21. Communication Towards a
Negotiated Peace: Conflict, Contestation and the Media, Pradip Thomas