Developing News: Global Journalism and the Coverage of "Third World" Development
London; New York: Routledge (2017), ix, 178 pp.
Contains bibliogr., index
ISBN 9780367427238 (pbk), 9781315269245 (online)
"Developing News sets out to describe how development is articulated in the news and used by newspeople as an analytical category to explain the world. It is about examining development as a discourse that is based on the harmful contrast between the developed and the developing (or the underdeveloped) and that sets the boundaries for what is permissible to say. Jairo Lugo-Ocando and An Nguyen begin by discussing the news coverage of development that emerged as a news category for newspapers and broadcasters after World War II. They move on to examine the way development has been reported by the mainstream media, exploring the rationales and ideologies that determined and continue to define the way the media think about and represent development in the news. In doing so, the authors contribute to a better understanding of the relationship between the news agenda, news sources and the development policies that are set in the centres of power." (Publisher description)
1 The "tokenization" of development in the news
2 Journalistic conventions and the geopolitics of development narratives
3 The "number game" in development news
4 Communicating containment and the Alliance for Progress
5 News coverage of foreign aid: a case study of the Millennium Village Project in African, US and UK media
6 Disempowering news: the feminization of development
7 New technologies for old ideas
8 Malthusianism and news framing of population growth
2 Journalistic conventions and the geopolitics of development narratives
3 The "number game" in development news
4 Communicating containment and the Alliance for Progress
5 News coverage of foreign aid: a case study of the Millennium Village Project in African, US and UK media
6 Disempowering news: the feminization of development
7 New technologies for old ideas
8 Malthusianism and news framing of population growth