Famine, Aid, Politics and the Media

Mon, 21 Oct 2013 16:03:00 BST

Wednesday 27 November 2013 at 15:15 in JM2/04

Prof Suzanne Franks (City)

famine-event.jpg

The media reporting of the Ethiopian Famine in 1984-5 was a ground-breaking news event. It had an unprecedented impact, challenging perceptions of Africa and mobilising public opinion and philanthropic action in a dramatic new way. The contemporary international configuration of aid, media pressure, and official policy is still directly affected and sometimes distorted by what was — as this book shows — also an inaccurate and misleading story. In popular memory, the reporting of Ethiopia and the resulting humanitarian intervention were a great success. Yet alternative interpretations give a radically different picture of misleading journalism and an aid effort which did more harm than good.

Using privileged access to BBC and Government archives, Reporting Disasters examines and reveals the internal factors which drove BBC news and offers a rare case study of how the media can affect public opinion and policymaking. It constructs the process that accounts for the immensity of the news event, following the response at the heart of government to the pressure of public opinion. And it shows that while the reporting and the altruistic festival that it produced triggered remarkable and identifiable changes, the continuing impact was not what the conventional account claims it to have been.

SUZANNE FRANKS was for many years a news and current affairs journalist with BBC TV. She left to found an independent production company for which she made several films about Africa. She is now Professor of Journalism at City University in London and she also teaches a course on humanitarian communication. Her PhD thesis was on the reporting of the Ethiopian famine and she has published widely on international news coverage and the history of broadcasting.

 

Seminars programme: http://hud.ac/ok

Contact: M.Klontzas@hud.ac.uk

Back to news index - October