Wednesday, 9 May 2012

The Effects of War have often acted as a Catalyst for Journalists



As a journalist, it is an essential role to report news that is in the public interest. To do so, journalists must seek the truth, and report their findings to an intended audience, whilst supplying evidence to support their stories.

In relation to reporting in warzones, does this search for the truth require journalists to enter and report from war-torn areas, and what are the main reasoning’s, decisions, laws, and legislations, that may influence a journalists role in reporting war?

Journalists that have entered warzones have become intertwined with the area of the conflict, and the battle between enemies. This has therefore affected the role and requirements that have to be observed and followed by a journalist reporting on war, and probes many lawful and politically challenging concerns in regards to journalists being able to seek the truth objectively, safely, and lawfully.

Through research and analysis, this discussion will provide evidence to support theory, and debate the main catalyst’s for a journalist reporting on war. A range of questions and issues will be explored, relating to how their roles are defined and projected to deliver newsworthy truth that supplies the intended audiences and important figures concerned.

Consider three main relationships:

Journalist to the Public – Journalist to Politics – Journalist to War


As journalists report war, their duty requires them to report from dangerous and hostile environments. The dangers of being in warzones capitulate to the search for truth, and the processes that journalists use as part of their job.

‘The digging process is supposed to be a routine part of daily journalism.’

                                                                                                            (Protess 1991)

Many circumstances dictate how a journalist can provide the necessary objectiveness to produce truthful and accurate news.

The warzones journalist’s report from, have deep impact on the context and authenticity of the stories they provide. In recent times, journalists have been what is known and considered to be embedded into warzones.

‘Drawn from news agencies and newspapers around the world, nearly 700 reporters, photographers, and cameramen have been part of the embedding program, which attached journalists to military units.’                                                                 (Lindner 2009)

The notions of conflict and war direct the journalist to be in the protection and guard of the allied nations of which they report to, and thus, they are intrinsically connected through a protective shield that allows them to do their job.

Getlin (2003) cited Lindner (2009), states:

‘Tom Rosenstiel, director of Project for Excellence in Journalism told the Los Angeles Times: “The virtue of embedding is that it allows reporters to eat, breathe, sleep and experience war first-hand with soldiers… the danger is that you’re liable to start reporting from the point of view of the troops who are protecting you… you owe your life to them”.’

The authenticity of the reporting would then come in to question, as to how, and what is being reported, is manipulated by being attached concurrently with the soldiers.

The viewpoint of war affecting journalists is shared through professionals within the industry as a form of publicised news, which indulges the confrontational output that is presented to journalists caught in conflict.

‘ABC news anchor Peter Jennings says he heard talk on the streets of Baghdad about bounties offered for kidnapped foreigners - $2000 for a journalist.’ 

(Foerstel 2006)

These dangerous circumstances are a common place situation that journalists find themselves drawn into. It is not only a practise seen in the present, but noticeable attention has been drawn to these facts in past conflicts too.

‘The abduction of the Chicago Tribunes’ Philip Caputo by Fedayeen in Lebanon in 1973 should have been a wakeup call for news organisations.’ 

(Foerstel 2006)  
 
A more recent event that highlights the dangers for journalists, is the death of Sunday Times Journalist, Marie Colvin.                                                Refer to Fig. 1

The dangers of reporting in war, defer to a journalists ambition and requirement to be in the action; to report, to gain the news, and to see live events as they unfold. Their presence is an abstract factor in the war itself. This however, does not yield to the connection a reporter has with exterior parties such as the public, and the government, but offers personal satisfaction for the journalist, in being able to do their job.

‘War reporting reveals its investments in sustaining a certain discursive authority – namely that of being and eyewitness.’                                                    (Allan 2004)

The public perceptions that are received from war correspondents and journalists, relies solely on the information placed into the public realm, and the existing knowledge that stems from a continuation of events. This information, can define a cultural perspective of war, and that relationship with the public.

‘War reporting’s positioning as a litmus test for journalism also rests on an understanding of its capacity to influence public perceptions.’

         (Allan 2004)

The public’s relationship with journalists is important for both parties, as the journalist needs to inform, and the public need to digest. It is also a key aspect that ‘media play a vital role in conventional democratic theory.’                                                      (Protess 1991)


This intrinsically connected value processes that the public are subjected to believe what they are informed, thus implying they rely on a journalist.

‘The conventional wisdom of investigative journalism holds that the general public, once mobilized, becomes a catalyst for change.’                                       (Protess 1991)

This, however, is a flawed aspect to suggest that in reporting, the public are a dependent figure that lapse to configure imaginative thoughts, without the process of information being fed through journalistic communications.

‘The too frequent lapses of ethical practice by those who call themselves journalists undermine confidence in the news media.’   

(Farrell 2008: Cited, Crook 2010)

This lack of confidence suggests that the public, although reliant on the information they receive, also have their own notions, and often perceive what they are told with discontent.

‘A seemingly unending list of public opinion surveys has found that the public holds journalism and the press in low regard.’                                                (Crook 2010)

War reporting has a significant impact to the relationship a journalist has with the public. This could be a substantial balance that the media have, to hold an important feature such as war reporting, that is regarded and demanded by the public. The media may consequentially be assigned to report war, to keep the public’s faith in journalism, and media. 

The shaping of news reporting to the public is defined by two methods referred to as; framing, and agenda-setting.                                                        (Lindner 2009)

These two methods are notions of perception employed to the public, which can be described as by Maslog (2005): ‘Framing [as a term] package key ideas, stock phrases, and stereotypical images to bolster a particular interpretation.’

‘After regular exposure to the frame, media consumers come to adopt the framed storyline as their dominant way of thinking about an issue.’

        (Lindner 2009)

This theory, in regards to war, stipulates how a media influx of terminology and negotiating messages to the public, influences stereotyping, and a feed of notions, that is from the only reliable source of information, thus the only information that can be interpreted.

The authenticity of this information can be questioned in relation to how the information is transferred to the public. How many alternative methods of one story are produced, before gaining the best available version of the truth?

‘Reporters and editors ideally probe events to find the best available version of the truth.’                                                                                                          (Protess 1991)

As discussed previously, journalists embedded within warzones may find themselves reporting from the vantage point of a soldier, rather than that of a journalist.

The alternative versions of truth become lost, as it is the best available version of truth that the public are streamlined in to believing, alongside an order of events or theory as to how it should be thought about.

This is referred to by McCombs (1994) as Agenda-Setting. Lindner (2009) states; ‘agenda setting tells the media consumer which issues are most important, framing provides us with a narrative to conceptualise the issue.’

The public’s perceptions are thus founded upon a version of truth that is embedded into the realm of realism, defined by a journalist’s interpretation of what is truthful in war.

‘The act of seeing for one’s self the heart of the story, encapsulates the larger problem of determining what counts as truth in the war zone.’

         (Allan 2004)

In shaping the news of war, the public are condemned to being immobile in deciding how war related incidents should be presented. This may ask the question of what, and who, is influenced by media representations of war, and how this affects the overall image projected.

 ‘Mass media… may be capable of changing public attitudes… they do not activate the public to participate… although they may be important for influencing the attitudes and behaviour of political elites.’                                                                (Protess 1991)

Information that is transferred may therefore be subjected to interference by political figures, affecting how information on war may be perceived, and providing an intended image, as suggested through agenda-setting, that nationalises conformed opinions on matters in war.

‘The experience of a reporter’s being there, so important for distant publics eager for news of the events of a war torn region, is shaped quite systematically by a weave of limitations – political, military, economic and technological. 

         (Allan 2004)

These limitations derive a more clinically lawful question, of how a journalist can then have a relationship with the public that is not succumbed to intrusion by political matters, and to convey an account of the truth that does not waver from the originality of events.

‘Truth telling, it needs to be acknowledged, is necessarily embedded in cultural politics of legitimacy; its authority resting on presence of the moral duty to bear witness by being there.’                                                                                                 (Allan 2004)

A journalist’s role in reporting the events of war and transferring them events to the public could be subjected to approval and interference form government and politics. This may shape and define the relations between these two parties, but also, influence the relationship the politicians have with the public too.

Lindner (2009): ‘A substantial body of literature in communications has demonstrated the capacity of media reports to shape attitudes regarding political issues.’

The political issues in war may have founded laws and legislations that may have been developed, or based upon conflicts and situations in war-torn countries, such as International Humanitarian Law.

This is the Law of Armed Conflict, but critics would say that this law is fallible.

Garraway (2012) argues: ‘Is there a Law of Armed Conflict; is there any point in there being a Law of Armed Conflict?’

This statement supports the lack of durability that laws and legislations within war have. Journalists may find themselves being drawn into political battles that may be based upon politically unfounded justifications for entering warzones. The incitation to become involved for a journalist is a position that grants them a set of rules and regulations that they must then follow to maintain validation of them being there.

Berger (1963) Cited Lindner (2009): ‘location in society constitutes a definition of rules which have to be obeyed.’

The politically defining roles that regulate and explain politicians positioning to evoke and transform laws, altering and defining existing legalities within war, and justifying entering the warzone, become irrelevant if the legislations that were in place formerly, are not obeyed in the present.

‘This was a battle that the United Nations had in 1945. They had abolished war. If you say something is illegal, it’s a bit ridiculous… having proceedings to regulate something that you have already said is illegal.’                       (Garraway 2012)

This could suggest that the legality issues surrounding war define why journalists are expected and required to enter the war-zones, as political elites struggle to maintain a concept and balance of power and nationalistic containment with the public. The politicians may need the media to incline their power.

Hallin (1994) cited Jorgensen (2009): ‘The media reflect the prevailing pattern of political debate: when consensus is strong they tend to stay within the limits of the political discussion it defines; when it begins to break down, coverage becomes increasingly critical and diverse in the viewpoints it represents.’

The media fluctuate to the political and practical responses and decisions made. If politics is gaining positive responses from the public or towards other matters, the media stay within realms of the politics that are supporting their role. Once the politics shows a sign of weakness, the media can expand and express more freely.

This could suggest the versions of the truth become more derailed to the public, thus influencing media to show politically demanded versions of events, to answer the requests following a strong public interest.

Hallin (1986): ‘The way the media report events is closely tied to the degree of consensus among the political elite.’

Consequently the only way this level of control can be maintained is by allowing and actuating reporting in war-zones, to deflect the controversy surrounding the war itself, and place messages of interpretation into the public sphere.

 ‘War is the exercise of force for the attainment of a political object unrestrained by any law save that of expediency.’                                                             (Clausewitz)

The convenience of deciding how, if, and when journalists should enter warzones, and what laws should be enforced and practised, allows a sustainment of control from government and political figures.

The facts of how laws are affected because of the wars and the politically aroused reasons for entering countries of war in the first instance, gives a pretence impression that more laws are being enforced, changed, or represented within the war-zones, thus aesthetically creating a false impression.

Garraway (2012) notes: ‘There is nothing new in the laws of war; they have always been there.’ The laws of war have also always been a forefront matter in conflict and the engagement of war.  Garraway also states: ‘Law has never been unregulated.’

The way journalists deliver the news regarding war also appears to incite an impartial balance of true events to the public.

Mermin (1996) suggests: ‘The major media try to maintain the illusion of fulfilling the journalistic ideas of balance and objectivity by finding conflicting possibilities in the efforts of officials to achieve the goals they have set.’                      (Cited Jorgensen 2009)

The media appear objective in their quest to find the truth, yet, as discussed, they are subjected to political influences. The search for the real, factual, and objective truth may be a disillusioned practise within war reporting in journalism.
 
Reports in America suggest that it is a potential harm to the face of the country if journalists report items of the truth.

Clyne (2006) states: ‘Some argue that journalists shouldn’t print or do things that might harm America’s image abroad.’

This could stem from the media’s attempt to maintain the illusion of objectivity, thus not allowing a fact to be reported that may state truth.

Clyne also argues that; ‘Democracy is based upon the idea that the people should have the ultimate power.’

This could imply that in reporting war, the public should be the main catalyst for the reporting, and that the illusions of objectivity are only a superficial attire of the media to please political officials.

Although Clyne also states; ‘Those in charge who do know the truth are able to maintain their status on the basis of keeping the people ignorant.’

Thus suggesting that politics and the influence of political elites are the prominent figures of authority, and the public are subjected to secrecy and obscured versions of truth, rendering the politicians the primary catalyst for reporting on war.

The theories discussed present a more exponentially appropriate argument, not of why journalists report war, but how journalists report war.

The influences and practices within media are clearly fallible and undefined, although artificially consistent.

The heart of a story is the truth, of which journalists, as discussed, have a moral duty to be a witness of. The truth in war reporting it seems is subjected to many alterations before being divulged; in practical terms, a chain of truth.

War – Journalist – Politicians – Journalist – Public:                

The anti-virtuous and parallel connection between the media and politics, defines the existence of news, and the shape of news expressed to the public.

It could be suggested that the morally justified relationship of these two factors, is a more incensed battle that engages in the search for dominance.

Rupert Murdoch has recently quoted former Prime Minister Gordon Brown as saying: ‘your company has declared war on my government and we have no alternative but to make war on your company.’                                                                          (Murdoch 2012)

In relation to the affect this has on war, Mr Brown responded:

‘The only phone call I had with Mr Murdoch in the last year of my time in office was a phone call specifically about Afghanistan and his newspaper's coverage of the war,’

                                                                                                            (Brown 2012)

The connection between powerful elite news organisations and the hierarchy of politicians is also supported by the following statement;

‘Mr Blair did not expressly request our support in 1995, 1997 or any other election, but he was a politician and I had no doubt that he would welcome the support of our newspapers and our readers.’                                                                                  (Murdoch 2012)

The public have distantly witnessed the apparentness of the relationships between politicians and news organisations, and the results of this are reflected in figures of U.K. interest in politics.

Dr Ruth Fox director of the Hansard Society's Parliament and Government Programme states: ‘The public seem to be disgruntled, disillusioned and disengaged. Thus far, coalition politics does not appear to have been good for public engagement.’                                                                                         (Cited BBC 2012)

All of the discussed influences on the media’s power to shape, influence, dictate, and supply the news, come to reveal a more conflicting issue of damaging relations between two influential parties in reporting war, that until now, have been invisible.

(Cicero): ‘Amidst the clash of arms, the war is silent.’

The people that report the war, and the people that dictate the rules and laws regarding this, are the very people that pollute the image and distinction between the truth and authenticity of interpretation. This in turn affects the view that the public have on not only the war, but the politicians and the media. In effect, the people who are in charge of publicising and maintaining all aspects associated with war are; politically, publicly, and inherently, at war with each other.





Fig 1.



Marie Colvin, Sunday Times Journalist. (Left)





Bibliography

Books:

Allan. S (2004): Reporting war: Journalism in wartime. Routledge: Oxon

Crook. T (2010): Comparative Media Law and Ethics. Routledge: Oxon

Foerstel. H (2006): Killing the Messenger; Journalists at risk in Modern Warfare. Praeger Publishers: U.S.A

John. A.V, (2006): War, Journalism, and the Shaping of the Twentieth Century, The Life and Times of Henry W. Nevinson. 1st ed. Tauris and Co: London.

Jorgensen. K (2009): The Handbook of Journalism Studies. Routledge: New York.

Keeble. R (2010): Peace Journalism, War and Conflict Resolution. Peter Lang Publishing: New York

Protess. D, et al, (1991): The Journalism of Outrage: Investigative reporting and agenda building in America. The Guilford press, Guilford Publications: New York, U.S.A



Journals:

Carrabine, E, 2011. Images of Torture: Culture Politics and Power. Crime, Media, Culture, [Online]. 7, 5, 6-28. Available at: http://cmc.sagepub.com/content/7/1/5 [Accessed 13 April 2012].

Epstein, Ho, et al., L. D.E, 2003. Public Responses to War. The Supreme Silence During War, [Online]. 1, 6-22. Available at: http://www.nyu.edu/classes/nbeck/q2/king.propensity.pdf [Accessed 28 April 2012].

Lindner, A, 2009. Among the Troops. Seeing the Iraq War Through Three Journalistic Vantage Points, [Online]. 56, No 1, 21-48. Available at: http://jstor.org/stable/10.1525/sp.2009.56.1.21 [Accessed 13 April 2012].




Websites:

Austin Clyne. 2006. Journalism During War: Patriotism vs. Journalistic Responsibility. [ONLINE] Available at: http://atheism.about.com/b/2006/07/18/journalism-during-war-patriotism-vs-journalistic-responsibility.htm. [Accessed 27 April 12].

BBC, Charles Garraway. 2012. College of Journalism. [ONLINE] Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/journalism/law/war-law/history-war-and-law.shtml. [Accessed 28 April 12].

BBC News. 2012. Gordon Brown denies Rupert Murdoch's Leveson 'war' claim. [ONLINE] Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17843752. [Accessed 28 April 12].

BBC News, (2012), Journalists Marie Colvin and Remi Ochlik die in Homs [ONLINE]. Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-17124786 [Accessed 28 April 12].

BBC News. 2012. Public attitude towards politics worsening, says Hansard survey. [ONLINE] Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17829933. [Accessed 28 April 12].

MSN News. 2012. Hunt: I won't quit over BSkyB row. [ONLINE] Available at: http://news.uk.msn.com/uk/hunt-i-wont-quit-over-bskyb-row-1. [Accessed 28 April 12].

MSN News. 2012. Live Updates: The Leveson Inquiry. [ONLINE] Available at: http://news.uk.msn.com/live-updates/leveson-inquiry/. [Accessed 28 April 12].




No comments:

Post a Comment