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Killing the Messenger

Journalists at Risk in Modern Warfare

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Killing the Messenger reveals the dangerous new face of war and journalism. Covering armed conflicts has always been dangerous business, but in the past, press heroes like Ernie Pyle and Edward R. Murrow faced only the danger of random bullets or bombs. Today's war correspondent is actually in the cross hairs, a target of combatants on all sides of conflicts. In their own words, correspondents describe the new dangers they face and attempt to explain why they are targeted.

Killing the Messenger reveals the dangerous new face of war and journalism. Covering armed conflicts has always been dangerous business, but in the past, press heroes like Ernie Pyle and Edward R. Murrow faced only the danger of random bullets or bombs. Today's war correspondent is actually in the cross hairs, a target of combatants on all sides of conflicts.

In this book, correspondents describe the new dangers they face, and attempt to explain why they are targeted. Is it simply that modern combatants are more brutal than in the past, or has journalism changed, making correspondents players, rather than observers, in modern warfare? Extended interviews with correspondents who have been abducted and tortured during Middle East conflicts shed chilling light on this new face of war. These journalists, who have paid dearly to bring first-hand images of war to the public, offer some surprising insights into the nature and motivation of their kidnappers, and the reasons why reporters are targeted. They display no self-pity and little inclination to blame anyone other than themselves. At the same time, they are candid in describing the violence within Iraq and without. Ways to reduce the risks for reporters are discussed, but these editors and correspondents suggest that, short of withdrawing into isolated and protected enclaves, they may be facing an indefinite escalation of violence against journalists.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Introduction
The Dangers of Reporting Conventional War
Journalism and the New Face of War
Personal Stories of Abduction, Torture, and Death
Why do they hate us?
Protecting Journalists at a Cost to Newsgathering
Selected Bibliography
Index

Produktdetails

Erscheinungsdatum
30. März 2006
Sprache
englisch
Seitenanzahl
178
Autor/Autorin
Herbert Foerstel
Verlag/Hersteller
Produktart
gebunden
Gewicht
438 g
Größe (L/B/H)
240/161/14 mm
ISBN
9780275987862

Portrait

Herbert Foerstel

HERBERT N. FOERSTEL is the retired former head of Branch Libraries at the University of Maryland in College Park and is a current member of the board of directors of the National Security Archive at George Washington University. He is the author of Surveillance in the Stacks (Greenwood, 1991), Secret Science (Praeger, 1993), Banned in the USA (Greenwood, 1994), Climbing the Hill with his daughter Karen Foerstel (Praeger, 1996), Free Expression and Censorship in America (Greenwood, 1997), and Banned in the Media (Greenwood, 1998)

Pressestimmen

"The job of war correspondent has always been a risky occupation. This book shows how the work has become far more dangerous in recent years. Foerstel demonstrates this fact with numerous accounts of abduction, death, and torture. He points out that in places like Afghanistan and Iraq there are no front lines, and reporters are always at risk. And there are other problems. Most reporters are strangers in strange lands and lack cultural knowledge and language skills. Thus, they must rely on local aides, which makes real first-hand reporting difficult and results in incomplete stories. In addition, reporters are often seen not as neutral observers but rather as part of the enemy. They may even be viewed as spies working for the CIA, a problem magnified by past efforts of the agency to use reporters as spies. A safer alternative might be to be embedded with US troops and abandon any real effort at firsthand news gathering. In all cases the quality, quantity, and veracity of news reports suffer. Foerstel supports his study with extensive endnotes....Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and general readers." - Choice

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