Media and conflict in the twenty-first century / edited by Philip Seib.
This collection of essays explores current issues surrounding the media and conflict in the Twenty-first Century. Essays will look at the role of evolving media technologies, the globalization of television and communications, public diplomacy, gender and war coverage, terrorism, and other Issues.
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Full Text (via ProQuest) |
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Other Authors: | |
Other title: | Media and conflict in the 21st century. |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
New York :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2005.
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Table of Contents:
- Effects of global television news on U.S. policy in international conflict / Eytan Gilboa
- International news and advanced information technology : changing the institutional domination paradigm? / Steven Livingston, W. Lance Bennett, and W. Lucas Robinson
- Getting to war : communications and mobilization in the 2002-03 Iraq crisis / Robin Brown
- Internet, politics, and missile defense / Jayne Rodgers
- Missing public in U.S. public diplomacy : exploring the news media's role in developing an American constituency / Kathy Fitzpatrick and Tamara Kosic
- Characteristics of war coverage by female correspondents / Cinny Kennard and Sheila T. Murphy
- Real war will never get on television : an analysis of casualty imagery in American television coverage of the Iraq War / Sean Aday
- News coverage of the Bosnian War in Dutch newspapers : impact and implications / Nel Ruigrok, Jan A.D Ridder, Otto Scholten
- Terrorist web sites : their contents, functioning, and effectiveness / Maura Conway
- News media and "the clash of civilizations" / Philip Seib.