Twelve ways the media
misrepresents violence:
Where do the media go wrong in dealing with
violence? This round-up gives us a start in understanding
Where
do the media go wrong in dealing with violence? This round-up gives us a start
in understanding.
Norwegian
peace studies professor Johann Galtung has laid out 12 points of concern were
journalism often goes wrong when dealing with violence. Each implicitly
suggests more explicit remedies.
1.
Decontextualizing violence: focussing on the irrational without looking at the
reasons for unresolved conflicts an dpolarization.
2.
Dualism: reducing the number of parties in a conflict to two, when often more
are involved. Stories that just focus on internal developments often ignore
such outside or `external` forces as foreign governments and transnational
companies.
3.
Manicheanism: portraying one side as good and demonizing the other as `evil`.
4.
Armageddon: presenting violence as inevitable, omitting alternatives.
5.
Focussing on individual acts of violence while avoiding structural causes, like
poverty, government neglect an dmilitary or police repression.
6.
Confusion: focussing only on the conflict arena (i.e. the battlefield or
location of violent incidents) but not on the forces and factors that influence
th eviolence.
7.
Excluding and omitting the bereaved, thus never explaining why there are acts
of revenge and spirals of violence.
8.
Failure to explore the causes of escalation and the impact of media coverage
itself.
9.
Failure to explore the goals of outside interventionists, especially big
powers.
10.
Failure to explore peace proposals and offer images of peaceful outcomes.
11.
Confusing cease-fires and negotiations with actual peace.
12. Omitting reconciliation: conflicts tend to re-emerge if attention is not
paid to efforts to heal fractured societies. When news about attempts to
resolve conflicts are absent, fatalism is reinforced. That can help engender
even more violence, when people have no images or information about possible
peaceful outcomes and the promise of healing.
Read
more:
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/coveringviolence.shmtl