Conflict Environments and Coverage
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Informe Itiae Bride Democracia U Comunicación Prensa Obrera U Sindical Agencias Noticiosas
www.flacsoandes.edu.ec REVISTA LATINOAMERICANA DE COMUNICACION Informe ITIae Bride Democracia u Comunicación Prensa Obrera u Sindical Agencias noticiosas Solé Díaz Bordenave Silva Somavía Vargas Pasquini ( II época ) DIRECTOR GENERAL DR. LUIS E. PROANO CONSEJO INTERNACIONAL DE REDACCION DR. LUIS RAMIRO BELTRAN LIC. ALBERTO MALDONADO Centro Internacional de Investigaciones para el Escuela de Ciencias de la Información Desarroll CIID - COLOMBIA Universidad Central de Quito - ECUADOR DR. MIGUEL DE MORAGAS SPA DR. PETER SCHENKEL ¡•acuitad de Ciencias de la Información Inundación l'riedrich Ebert en CIESPAL Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona - LSPAÑA LIC. MARCO ENCALADA DR. JOHN T. McNELLY Director Técnico de CIESPAL Universidad de Winsconsin - Madison DR. LUIS GONZAGA MOTTA DR A. CUMANDA GAMBOA DE ZELAYA Experto en Comunicación Social Decano de la Facuitad de Comunicación Fundación Friedrich Ebert en CIESPAL Unh'ersidad Estatal de Guayaquil - ECUADOR RAFAEL RONCAGLIOLO DR. EDUARDO CONTRERAS BUDGE Director de ILET - Instituto Latinoamericano Experto en Comunicación Social de Estudios Transnacionales - MEXICO. Fundación F’riedrich liberten CIES PAL DR. JOSE MARQUES DE MELO JOSE STEINSLEGER instituto Metodista de Ensino Superior E d itor / A sesor BRASIL Fundación Friedrich Ebert en CIESPAL COMITE EDITORIAL JOSE STEINSLEGER DR. PETER SCHENKEL LIC. MARCO ENCALADA Edición, Redacción y Diseño Gráfico Universidad Autónoma del Caribe CORRESPONSALES Universidad de Sao Paulo * María Nazareth Fcrreira Ana Leticia Valle C. Facultad de Comunicación Social -
Health Care Under Fire: the New Normal?
Michelle Mülhausen, Emma Tuck and Heather Zimmerman London School of Economics and Political Science Department of International Development Health Care Under Fire: The New Normal? 10 March 2017 Health Care Under Fire: The New Normal? Background of consultancy report: This research and report was compiled for Chatham House by a research team at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). The project received support from partnership1 with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The report fulfils the requirements of the Humanitarian Consultancy Project for the MSc in International Development and Humanitarian Emergencies. 1 Partnership in this case refers to specific extended, continued collaboration and engagement from the outset to completion of the project. 2 Copyright front cover photo: AFP Photo / Said Khatib. Page 2 Health Care Under Fire: The New Normal? TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................................................... 5 ACRONYMS .......................................................................................................................................................... 6 GLOSSARY ............................................................................................................................................................ 6 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................... -
JULIAN ASSANGE: When Google Met Wikileaks
JULIAN ASSANGE JULIAN +OR Books Email Images Behind Google’s image as the over-friendly giant of global tech when.google.met.wikileaks.org Nobody wants to acknowledge that Google has grown big and bad. But it has. Schmidt’s tenure as CEO saw Google integrate with the shadiest of US power structures as it expanded into a geographically invasive megacorporation... Google is watching you when.google.met.wikileaks.org As Google enlarges its industrial surveillance cone to cover the majority of the world’s / WikiLeaks population... Google was accepting NSA money to the tune of... WHEN GOOGLE MET WIKILEAKS GOOGLE WHEN When Google Met WikiLeaks Google spends more on Washington lobbying than leading military contractors when.google.met.wikileaks.org WikiLeaks Search I’m Feeling Evil Google entered the lobbying rankings above military aerospace giant Lockheed Martin, with a total of $18.2 million spent in 2012. Boeing and Northrop Grumman also came below the tech… Transcript of secret meeting between Julian Assange and Google’s Eric Schmidt... wikileaks.org/Transcript-Meeting-Assange-Schmidt.html Assange: We wouldn’t mind a leak from Google, which would be, I think, probably all the Patriot Act requests... Schmidt: Which would be [whispers] illegal... Assange: Tell your general counsel to argue... Eric Schmidt and the State Department-Google nexus when.google.met.wikileaks.org It was at this point that I realized that Eric Schmidt might not have been an emissary of Google alone... the delegation was one part Google, three parts US foreign-policy establishment... We called the State Department front desk and told them that Julian Assange wanted to have a conversation with Hillary Clinton... -
Social Movements and Network Analysis in Tunisia Before the Arab Spring Movimientos Sociales Y Análisis De Redes En Túnez Antes De La Primavera Árabe
Social movements and network analysis in Tunisia before the Arab Spring Movimientos sociales y análisis de redes en Túnez antes de la Primavera Árabe Citation: Laura Pérez-Altable (2016) & Saúl Blanco. "Social movements and network analysis in Tunisia before the Arab Spring". Hipertext.net [Online], 2016. Núm. 14. http://raco.cat/index.php/Hipertext/article/view/311836/405621 DOI: 10.2436/20.8050.01.30 Laura Pérez-Altable Saúl Blanco [email protected] [email protected] Universitat Pomeu Fabra Universidad Carlos III Keywords: Social movements, social network analysis, arab spring, activism Abstract: In recent years, there has been a great deal of interest on the role of social media in the so-called Arab Spring revolt, but the uprising was not the result of a sudden event. Before it began in late 2010, protests have been staged in some Arab countries that paved the way to this major event (Al-Rawi, 2014, p. 916; Cassara, 2013, p.191). As Gilad Lotan et al. noted (2011, p. 1376) each country has its own context; hence this article focusses on Tunisia. Tunisia was the first Arab country where the Arab Spring began, on December 17, 2010, when Mohammed Bouazizi, a fruit vendor from Sidi Bouzid, set himself on fire in front of a public building. As it is necessary to understand what led to the growing interest on the role of social media, this article examines the digital activism, specifically on Twitter, which took place during the months that preceded the uprising in Tunisia. Thus, this article focusses on the latency phase of the Arab Spring in Tunisia, following the framework proposed by Alberto Melucci in his seminal work Nomads of the present (1989). -
12 June 2011
MNCH in the news: 1 - 12 June 2011 Zambia AIDS fight in K72bn boost UKZAMBIANS – 12 June 2011 Mr Banda said US government's assistance was bearing fruit as manifested through the remarkable improvement made in maternal and child health, TB, malaria and HIV and AIDS indicators … Ambulances bridge healthcare gaps Livemint – 12 June 2011 While the maternal mortality ratio has fallen in the last three decades, progress is tardy and far from meeting the United Nation's Millennium Development Goal of reducing it to 109 for every 100000 births by 2015. Dr Nomita Chandhiok, a maternal … Four hours to save four million children Aljazeera.net – 12 June 2011 You don't need to be a statistician to see that rates of child mortality are high here; a simple visit to the graveyard in the desert village of Hadaja reveals as many small mounds as large, as well as an open grave (size: small), yet to be filled. ... NPHCDA deploys 3500 midwives to rural communities Nigerian Tribune – 12 June 2011 The National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA), has so far deployed 3500 midwives to rural communities across the country to reduce the current high rate of maternal mortality in Nigeria, the NPHCDA Executive Secretary, Dr. Muhammad Ali ... UN summit sets realistic target to combat AIDS Times of India – 11 June 2011 The key elements of the Global Plan include ensuring that all pregnant women have access to quality life-saving HIV prevention and treatment services for themselves and their children, HIV, maternal health, newborn and child health and family planning .. -
Focus on Sub-Saharan Africa
3/4 YEAR 2004 VOL.16 NO.3/4 TWAS ewslette nTHE NEWSLETTER OF THE THIRD WORLD ACADEMY OF SCIENCESr Focus on sub-Saharan Africa Published with the support of the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences EDITORIAL TWAS NEWSLETTER Published quarterly with the support of the Kuwait Foundation THIS SPECIAL ISSUE OF THE TWAS NEWSLETTER, PREPARED IN COOPERATION WITH THE for the Advancement of Sciences AFRICAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES (AAS), EXAMINES THE STATE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (KFAS) by The Third World Academy of Sciences (TWAS) (S&T) IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA. IN MANY WAYS, IT REFLECTS THE CHANGING NATURE OF c/o ICTP, Strada Costiera 11 S&T IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD AND THE CHALLENGES THAT TWAS ITSELF FACES IN 34014 Trieste, Italy tel: +39 040 2240327 LIGHT OF THESE CHANGES. fax: +39 040 224559 email: [email protected] website: www.twas.org Why sub-Saharan Africa? The stakes could not be higher. While scientists tend to think that the best places to examine TWAS COUNCIL science are places where the best science is taking place, sub-Saharan Africa provides a text- President C.N.R. Rao (India) book case of the consequences of the absence of science within a society. Clearly, trends in eco- Immediate Past President nomic and social devel- José I. Vargas (Brazil) opment, public health Vice-Presidents Jorge E. Allende (Chile) Why Sub-Saharan Africa? and environmental qual- Lu Yongxiang (China) ity spell disaster not just Lydia P. Makhubu (Swaziland) Ismail Serageldin (Egypt) for sub-Saharan Africa but for the rest of the world. -
E/ECA/CM/53/5 Economic and Social Council
United Nations E/ECA/CM/53/5 Economic and Social Council Distr.: General 1 April 2021 Original: English Economic Commission for Africa Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development Fifty-third session Addis Ababa (hybrid), 22 and 23 March 2021 Report of the Conference of Ministers on the work of its fifty-third session Introduction 1. The fifty-third session of the Economic Commission for Africa Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development was held at the Economic Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa, in a hybrid format featuring both in-person and online participation, on 22 and 23 March 2021. I. Opening of the session [agenda item 1] A. Attendance 2. The meeting was attended by representatives of the following States: Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burundi, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cabo Verde, Chad, Comoros, Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia , Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Morocco, Mozambique, Nigeria, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe. 3. The following United Nations bodies and specialized agencies were represented: Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations; International Civil Aviation Organization; International Fund for Agricultural Development; International Labour Organization; International Organization -
The International Politics of Authoritarian Internet Control in Iran
International Journal of Communication 12(2018), 3856–3876 1932–8036/20180005 Transforming Threats to Power: The International Politics of Authoritarian Internet Control in Iran MARCUS MICHAELSEN1 University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Authoritarian Internet control is generally explained by domestic power preservation: to curtail dissent within their borders, authoritarian regimes censor, monitor, and shape online communications. Yet this focus neglects important external factors. As a global communication technology, the Internet carries strategic and normative interests of competing international actors. This article investigates the influence of international politics on practices of Internet surveillance and censorship. Using the case of Iran, I analyze how opposition to the West, and particularly to the United States, led the Iranian state to perceive the Internet as a strategic battleground for regime stability. I argue that external threats in the form of democracy promotion, cyberattacks, and sanctions have created conditions enabling the Iranian state to advance and justify capabilities for censorship and surveillance. They have also pushed the regime to build a “national Internet” that is more resistant to outside influence and open to state control. Authoritarian practices are thus produced in international struggles over the use, content, and infrastructure of digital technologies. Keywords: information and communication technologies, censorship, surveillance, authoritarianism, international relations, Iran The fundamental aim of authoritarian rulers is to maintain and expand political power. In the field of Internet politics, authoritarian power holders have pursued this aim by establishing sophisticated systems of Internet control to curb alternative information and dissent perceived as challenge to their rule. They have also come to benefit from digital communication technologies for information manipulation, monitoring, and surveillance. -
Social Media and Protest Mobilization: Evidence from the Tunisian Revolution
Social Media and Protest Mobilization: Evidence from the Tunisian Revolution Anita Breuer German Development Institute Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik German Development Institute Tulpenfeld 6 D - 53113 Bonn www.die-gdi.de [email protected] Todd Landman Institute for Democracy and Conflict Resolution, University of Essex University of Essex Wivenhoe Park Colchester, Essex CO4 3SQ United Kingdom www.idcr.org.uk [email protected] Dorothea Farquhar Institute for Democracy and Conflict Resolution, University of Essex University of Essex Wivenhoe Park Colchester, Essex CO4 3SQ United Kingdom www.idcr.org.uk [email protected] Paper prepared for the 4th European Communication Conference for the European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA), Istanbul, Turkey, 24-27 October 2012. DRAFT ONLY: DO NOT CITE WITHOUT THE AUTHORS’ PERMISSION Abstract One of the hallmarks of the Arab Spring uprisings has been the role of social media in articulating demands of the popular protesters and broadcasting dramatic events as they unfolded, but it is less clear whether social media acted as a catalyst for many of the movements in the region. Using evidence from the popular protests in Tunisia between December 2010 and January 2011, this paper argues that social media acted as an important resource for popular mobilization against the regime of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. Drawing on the insights from ‘resource mobilization theory’ (RMT), we show that social media (1) allowed a ‘digital elite’ to break the national media blackout through brokering information for mainstream media; (2) provided the basis for intergroup collaboration that facilitated a large ‘cycle of protest’ to develop; (3) overcame the collective action problem through reporting event magnitudes that raised the perception of success for potential free riders, and (4) led to an additional element of ‘emotional mobilization’ through depicting the worst atrocities associated with the regime’s response to the protests. -
Mauritania: the Country's Situation, Including the Human Rights Situation
Response to Information Request MRT101577.FE Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada www.irb-cisr.gc.ca Français Home Contact Us Help Search canada.gc.ca Home > Research > Responses to Information Requests RESPONSES TO INFORMATION REQUESTS (RIRs) New Search | About RIRs | Help The Board 16 August 2006 About the Board MRT101577.FE Biographies Organization Chart Mauritania: The country's situation, including the human rights situation and the political situation (August 2005 - August 2006) Employment Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Ottawa Legal and Policy References Background Publications In August 2005, a military coup d'état led by Colonel Ely Ould Mohamed Vall Tribunal (UN 9 Dec. 2005; AI 23 May 2006; Aujourd'hui Le Maroc 3 Aug. 2005) [translation] Refugee Protection "put an end to the totalitarian practices" of President Maaouiya Ould Taya (FIDH 3 Division Aug. 2005; Mauritanie-web 3 Aug. 2005), who had been in power since 1984 (ibid.). The Military Council for Justice and Democracy (Conseil militaire pour la Immigration Division justice et la démocratie, CMJD), headed by Colonel Vall, now runs the country Immigration Appeal (Jeune Afrique/L'Intelligent 2 - 8 Oct. 2005, 38; see also FIDH Apr. 2006, 9). Division Decisions The CMJD has made some progress in rebuilding democratic institutions (ICG 24 Apr. 2006, 17; Jeune Afrique 26 Mar. - 1 Apr. 2006a, 53; see also AU 21 June Forms 2006, 1) and in eliminating corruption (ICG 24 Apr. 2006, 13- 14; UN 24 Feb. Statistics 2006). However, although freedom of association is respected and although various Research non-governmental organizations (NGOs) working in human rights have been recognized (Jeune Afrique 26 Mar. -
Dynamics of International News Environments
Dynamics of international news environments Comparative analysis of online news services in the US and India By Kohei Watanabe Submitted to Central European University Department of Political Science In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Supervisor: Professor Kate Coyer CEU eTD Collection Budapest, Hungary (2011) ABSTRACT This research aims to understand the changes in international news environments by the Internet with particular interests in the global dominance of the US-based ITC companies. More than 60,000 international news items are collected from Yahoo! News, Google News and the online services of leading newspapers in the US and India, and dictionary-based computer content analysis is performed. In this thesis, the difference in increase of representation of news about developing countries by Yahoo! News and Google News between the US and India are examined. The results of the analyses show that Yahoo! News and Google News are creating almost the same amount of changes in representation of developing countries in the US and India. But Yahoo! News represents developing countries less than the online services of newspapers, while Google News represents developing countries more than the online services of newspapers. Less representation of developing countries by Yahoo! News is due to its total reliance on news agencies for news items. Higher representation of developing countries by Google News is due to its extremely diverse news sources including CEU eTD Collection non-Western news organizations. The diversity in news sources produces a highly volatile and concentrated news coverage pattern and attracts attention from Western audience. -
El Sahel Celebrada En Bruselas El Pasado 23 De Febrero
Los jefes de Estado y Gobierno de la Unión Europea y de la iniciativa G5 Sahel durante la primera Conferencia Internacional para el Sahel celebrada en Bruselas el pasado 23 de febrero. [ internacional ] Comprometidos con EL SAHEL La Unión Europea da su respaldo institucional a la Fuerza Conjunta G5 de cinco países sahelianos y crea formalmente la Alianza Sahel para la cooperación S, quizás, la zona del planeta cadas en el área. Pero, en esta ocasión, la el corazón de África es clave para la vida más idónea para que los de- comunidad internacional, y, sobre todo, de los africanos, la seguridad de todo el predadores del terrorismo y la vecina Europa, sabe que tiene que ac- continente y la paz de todos y cada uno la delincuencia organizada tuar antes de que los yihadistas puedan de nosotros. Eencuentren donde anidar. Y buscar nue- hacerse con el poder en un estado o te- «No puede haber paz sin desarrollo», vas presas. Sus inmensos e inescrutables rritorio. Y, la experiencia ha demostrado afirmó contundente Federica Mogherini desiertos, fronteras porosas, gobiernos que debe hacerlo con un enfoque global en la primera Conferencia Internacional débiles, lacras del cambio climático, en el que se aúnen esfuerzos militares para el Sahel celebrada el pasado día 23 hambrunas, y una población muy jo- con los económicos, políticos y de ayuda de febrero en Bruselas. Además de los ven y cansada de no tener futuro hacen al desarrollo y en el que se compartan jefes de Estado o Gobierno de todos del Sahel un lugar inseguro e indómito.