Document details

The State of Humanitarian Journalism

Humanitarian-journalism.net;University of East Anglia (2018), 36 pp.
"Very few international news organisations routinely cover humanitarian affairs. Only 12 news outlets reported on all four of the humanitarian events we analysed in 2016. Because of the high costs of producing regular, original journalism on humanitarian issues, commercial news organisations do not usually cover humanitarian issues, with the exception of major ‘emergencies’. Most humanitarian journalism is now funded by states or private foundations. This is worrying because claiming that particular actors or activities are ‘humanitarian’ is a powerful form of legitimacy. It is important that media about the suffering does not become a vehicle for commercial or political interests. A major challenge of foundation funding is its unsustainable nature, as most foundations want to provide start-up money, rather than giving ongoing support. Meanwhile government funding can constrain where and how humanitarian reporting takes place because of foreign policy objectives and diplomatic tensions." (Executive summary)
Introduction, 3
1 Who produces humanitarian journalism? News organisations and funding models, 5
2 How are conflicts reported? A quantitative analysis of international news coverage of South Sudan and Yemen in 2017, 13
3 How are 'natural' disasters reported? Comparing coverage of the 2015 Nepal earthquake by Thomson Reuters and IRIN News, 21
4 What do audiences of mainstream news think of humanitarian journalism? 27
5 What do those working in the aid sector think of humanitarian news? 30
6 What effect does critical news coverage of the aid sector have on public opinion? The Daily Mail Effect reconsidered, 34