Wed, March 19, 14:00-16:00
Matthew Powers: Can NGOs Do Journalism? Understanding the Information
Work of Humanitarian and Human Rights NGOs
University of Westminster, Harrow Campus (tube stop: Northwick Park)
Room A6.8
Registration: at latest until Sunday, March 16, per e-mail to
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Abstract
For much of the 20th century, most of the international news reaching
American audiences was produced by foreign correspondents stationed in
news bureaus scattered across the globe. Whatever that model’s merits
and shortcomings, there is little doubt it is a model under duress – if
it’s not entirely broken. At the same time as foreign news coverage has
been shrinking, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) – groups like
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Oxfam – have assumed
increasingly prominent roles in the provision of information from
abroad. Can NGOs play a role as journalistic entities by providing
international affairs information? On the one hand, NGOs may represent
an expansion of international news reporting, as their work might expand
news coverage to locales and issues that otherwise receive little
coverage. On the other hand, NGOs may constitute a threat to
international news reporting by blurring the lines between advocacy and
journalism.
In this talk, I draw on interviews, participant observation and content
analysis to argue that NGOs encounter journalism in at least three
distinct ways. First, at the level of general news media, NGOs find
their acceptance conditioned by a process of journalistic purification,
wherein their work is accepted only if it obeys the norms and rules of
journalistic production. Second, at the level of the prestige press,
NGOs find increasing receptivity as information providers as a result of
their broader inclusion in elite political debate. Third, found mostly
online, NGOs ignore news organizations altogether and pursue their own
direct-to-public communication, mixing journalistic and advocacy
formats. I conclude by exploring some of the implications of these
findings for the broader study of contemporary journalism and advocacy.
Biography
Matthew Powers is an Assistant Professor in the Department of
Communication at the University of Washington-Seattle. His research
interests include journalism studies, transnational advocacy and
comparative media. His academic writings have been published in Journal
of Communication, Journal of Communication Inquiry and Journalism
Studies, among others. At present, he is working on a manuscript about
the role NGOs play in the changing landscape of foreign news.
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