[1]
A critique of Amartya Sen’s Argument on Famine and Democracy: .
[2]
Africa – News and Analysis | News, analysis and comment on Africa: .
[3]
Africa is Tribal, Europe is Ethnic: the Power of Words in the Media: .
[4]
Ahmed, Shamima NGOs in international politics. Kumarian Press.
[5]
AlertNet - A Thomson Reuters Foundation Service - AlertNet: .
[6]
Allen, R. 1986. ‘Bob’s Not Your Uncle’ . Capital and class. 30, (1986).
[7]
Allen, T. and Seaton, J. 1999. The media of conflict: war reporting and representations of ethnic violence. Zed Books.
[8]
Allen, T. and Seaton, J. 1999. The media of conflict: war reporting and representations of ethnic violence. Zed Books.
[9]
Allen, T. and Seaton, J. 1999. The media of conflict: war reporting and representations of ethnic violence. Zed Books.
[10]
Amartya, Sen Individual Freedom as a Social Commitmenmt.
[11]
Anyone here survived a wave, speak English and got a mobile? Aid agencies, the media and reporting disasters since the Tsunami: 2007. .
[12]
Barnett, Michael N. and Weiss, Thomas George 2008. Humanitarianism in question: politics, power, ethics. Cornell University Press.
[13]
BBC College of Journalism - video discussion of new media and the Arab Spring: .
[14]
BBC World Service Trust -: .
[15]
Becker, Jasper 1998. Hungry ghosts: Mao’s secret famine. Henry Holt.
[16]
Black, Maggie 1992. A cause for our time: Oxfam, the first 50 years. Oxford University Press.
[17]
Boltanski, Luc and Dawsonera 1999. Distant suffering: morality, media, and politics. Cambridge University Press.
[18]
Brown, R.D. and Wilson, R. 2009. Chapter 1, Thomas Laqueur, "Mourning, Pity, and the Work of Narrative in the Making of "Humanity”” (pp. 31-58), . Humanitarianism and suffering: the mobilization of empathy. Cambridge University Press.
[19]
Brown, Richard D. and Wilson, Richard 2009. Humanitarianism and suffering: the mobilization of empathy. Cambridge University Press.
[20]
Caton-Jones, Michael 2005. Shooting dogs. BBC, UK Film Council, CrossDay Productions.
[21]
Chouliaraki, Lilie 2006. The spectatorship of suffering. SAGE.
[22]
Clark, D.J. 2004. The production of a contemporary famine image: the image economy, indigenous photographers and the case of Mekanic Philipos. Journal of International Development. 16, 5 (Jul. 2004), 693–704. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/jid.1121.
[23]
Congo, the Forgotten Crisis: .
[24]
Cottle, Simon and Dawsonera 2009. Global crisis reporting: journalism in the global age. Open University Press.
[25]
Cottle, Simon and Dawsonera 2009. Global crisis reporting: journalism in the global age. Open University Press.
[27]
Dallaire, Roméo and Beardsley, Brent 2004. Shake hands with the devil: the failure of humanity in Rwanda. Arrow.
[28]
Daniel Hallin 21AD. Presentation Given at the American Media and wartime Challenges Conference.
[29]
David Campbell Photography Multimedia Politics: .
[30]
De Waal, A. et al. 1997. Famine crimes: politics & the disaster relief industry in Africa. African Rights & the International African Institute in association with James Currey.
[31]
De Waal, Alexander and International African Institute 1997. Famine crimes: politics & the disaster relief industry in Africa. African Rights & the International African Institute in association with James Currey, Oxford & Indiana University Press, Bloomington.
[32]
Des Forges, Alison Liebhafsky et al. 1999. ‘Leave none to tell the story’: genocide in Rwanda. Human Rights Watch.
[33]
Dikötter, Frank 2010. Mao’s great famine: the history of China’s most devastating catastrophe, 1958-1962. Bloomsbury Publishing.
[34]
Disasters Emergency Committee | Working together: .
[35]
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting: World’s Disasters Overlooked: .
[36]
Fielding, Helen 1995. Cause celeb. Picador.
[37]
Franks, S. 2006. HOW FAMINE CAPTURED THE HEADLINES. Media History. 12, 3 (Dec. 2006), 291–312. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13688800601014025.
[38]
Franks, S. 2005. Lacking a Clear Narrative: Foreign Reporting after the Cold War. Political quarterly . 76, Suppl.1 (2005), 91–101.
[39]
Franks, S. 2010. ‘The Neglect of Africa and the Power of Aid’ . The international communication gazette. 72, 1 (2010), 71–84.
[40]
Franks, Suzanne 2013. Reporting disasters: famine, aid, politics and the media. Hurst.
[42]
George, Terry 2004. Hotel Rwanda. Kigali Releasing, Miracle Pictures.
[43]
Gill, Peter 1986. A year in the death of Africa: politics, bureaucracy, and the famine. Paladin Grafton.
[44]
Gill, Peter 2010. Famine and foreigners: Ethiopia since Live Aid. Oxford University Press.
[45]
Glenda, Cooper Fron their own correspondent? new media and changes in disaster coverage: lessons to be learnt.
[46]
Glenda Cooper: When lines between NGO and news organization blur » Nieman Journalism Lab: .
[47]
Glennie, J. and Provost, C. 28AD. We need greater transparency over aid budgets. Guardian. (28AD).
[48]
Gourevitch, Philip 1999. We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families: stories from Rwanda. Picador.
[49]
Harrison, Paul and Palmer, Robin H. 1986. News out of Africa: Biafra to Band Aid. H. Shipman.
[50]
Herman, Edward S. and Chomsky, Noam 1988. Chapter 1 of Manufacturing consent. Manufacturing consent: the political economy of the mass media. Pantheon.
[51]
Hilsum, Lindsey 2012. Sandstorm: Libya in the time of revolution. Faber and Faber.
[52]
How Luther went viral: http://www.economist.com/nod/21541719 A very good look at how media has always been ‘new’ and used by both sides in conflicts.
[54]
ICRC - World Disasters Report: focus on information in disasters: .
[56]
Keen, David 2008. Complex emergencies. Polity.
[57]
Keen, David 2008. Complex emergencies. Polity.
[58]
Keith, Somerville 2010. British media coverage of the post-election viiolence in Kenya, 2007-8Journal of Eastern African Studies. 3, 3 (2010).
[59]
Keith, Somerville 2010. British media coverage of the post-election viiolence in Kenya, 2007-8Journal of Eastern African Studies. 3, 3 (2010).
[60]
Kellow, C. and Steeves, H. 1998. The role of radio in the Rwandan genocide. Journal of Communication. 48, 3 (Sep. 1998), 107–128. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-2466.1998.tb02762.x.
[61]
Mamdani, Mahmood 2001. When victims become killers: colonialism, nativism, and the genocide in Rwanda. Princeton University Press.
[62]
Marinovich, Greg and Silva, João 2011. The Bang-Bang Club: snapshots from a hidden war. Basic Books.
[63]
Matthew T, Harmon The Media, Technology and United States Foreign Policy: A Re-Examination of the ‘CNN Effect’. A Journal of International Affairs. 3, 2.
[64]
Melvern, L. 2010. ‘The press failed to hold politicians to account over Rwanda’ . The Guardian. (2010).
[65]
Moeller, S.D. 1999. Compassion fatigue: how the media sell disease, famine, war, and death. Routledge.
[66]
Moeller, Susan D. 1999. Compassion fatigue: how the media sell disease, famine, war, and death. Routledge.
[67]
Moeller, Susan D. 1999. Compassion fatigue: how the media sell disease, famine, war, and death. Routledge.
[68]
Moeller, Susan D. 1999. Compassion fatigue: how the media sell disease, famine, war, and death. Routledge.
[69]
Morozov, Evgeny 2011. The net delusion: the dark side of internet freedom. Public Affairs.
[70]
NATO Intervention in the Libyan Civil War: costs and prospects for the future: .
[71]
New York Times 1AD. Critics of Sen. (1AD).
[72]
Nic, Newman 2009. The Rise of Social Media and its impact on mainstream journalism. (2009).
[73]
On the trail of Ethiopian aid and guns: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/ from our own correspondent/8548412.stm.
[74]
Owen, J. and Purdey, H. 2009. International news reporting: frontlines and deadlines. Wiley-Blackwell.
[75]
Pambazuka News : Issue 545: .
[76]
Pawson, L. 2007. ‘Reporting African Wars’ . Communicating war: memory, media and military. Arima Publishing. 42–55.
[77]
Philo, G. 1993. ‘From Buerk to Band Aid’. Getting the message: news, truth and power. Routledge. 104–125.
[78]
Polman, Linda 2010. War games: the story of aid and war in modern times. Viking.
[79]
Price, Monroe Edwin and Thompson, Mark 2002. Forging peace: intervention, human rights, and the management of media space. Edinburgh University Press.
[80]
Richardson, John E. 2007. Analysing newspapers: an approach from critical discourse analysis. Palgrave Macmillan.
[81]
Rieff, David 2002. A bed for the night: humanitarianism in crisis. Vintage.
[82]
Rieff, David 2002. Chapter 7. A bed for the night: humanitarianism in crisis. Vintage.
[83]
Robinson, Piers 2002. The CNN effect: the myth of news, foreign policy and intervention. Routledge.
[84]
Robinson, Piers 2002. The CNN effect: the myth of news, foreign policy and intervention. Routledge.
[85]
Rodgers, James 2012. Reporting conflict. Palgrave Macmillan.
[86]
Rodgers, James 2012. Reporting conflict. Palgrave Macmillan.
[87]
Roning, H. ’Unholy Alliance . Rhodes Journalism Review. 18.
[88]
Sambrook, R. 2009. ‘Citizen Journalism’ . International news reporting: frontlines and deadlines. Wiley-Blackwell.
[89]
Sen, Amartya 1999. Development as freedom. Knopf.
[90]
Sen, Amartya 1999. Development as freedom. Knopf.
[91]
Sen, Amartya and Oxford University Press 1981. Poverty and famines: an essay on entitlement and deprivation. Oxford University Press.
[92]
Shaw, Martin 1996. Civil society and media in global crises: representing distant violence. Pinter.
[93]
Shrinking World: The decline of international reporting in the British press | Media Standards Trust: .
[94]
Somalia’s Unholy Alliance: media, donors and aid agencies: .
[95]
Somerville, Keith 2012. Radio propaganda and the broadcasting of hatred: historical development and definitions. Palgrave Macmillan.
[96]
Starving In Silence: A Report On Famine and Censorship | ReliefWeb: .
[97]
Stephen, Deveraux 2001. Sen’s Entitlement Approach: Critiques and Counter-Critiques. 29, 3 (2001).
[98]
Suzanne, Franks "Lacking a Clear Narrative: Foreign Reporting after the Cold War” (The Political Quarterly). The Political Quarterly. 76, 1.
[99]
Suzanne, Franks 2010. Why Bob Geldof Has Got it Wrong. 21, 2 (2010).
[100]
The Arab Spring: A new era in a transforming globe: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alon-benmeir/the-arab-spring-a-new--era b 1082577.html?ref=world.
[101]
‘The Great Global Switch-Off International Coverage in UK Public Service Broadcasting’ : http://www.oxfam.org.uk/search?q=harding great global&x=20&y=7.
[102]
The Live Aid Legacy: The developing world through British eyes - A research report: http://www.dochas.ie/Shared/Files/7/The Live Aid legacy.pdf.
[103]
The News Media’s Coverage of the Vietnam War: .
[104]
Thompson, Allan 2007. The Media and the Rwanda Genocide. Pluto Press.
[105]
Twitter, Facebook and You Tube’s role in Tunisia uprising: .
[106]
US military action in Somalia: Black Hawk Down to today’s attack: .
[107]
Vaux, Tony 2001. The selfish altruist: relief work in famine and war. Earthscan.
[108]
Vaux, Tony 2001. The selfish altruist: relief work in famine and war. Earthscan.
[109]
Vaux, Tony 2001. The selfish altruist: relief work in famine and war. Earthscan.
[110]
We need greater transparency over aid budgets | Jonathan Glennie and Claire Provost | Global development | guardian.co.uk: .
[111]
Western Military Intervention in Libya - how will it end? http://huffingtonpost.co.uk/adnan-aldaini/western-military-interven b 938286.html.
[112]
Wheeler, Nicholas J. and Oxford University Press 2000. Saving strangers: humanitarian intervention in international society. Oxford University Press.