NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS

This article uses online news of the 2011 Somali famine, a humanitarian disaster, to investigate the role of alternative transnational news agencies and Western mainstream news agencies in attributing news to sources. The study concludes that Panapress, an African news agency, originally position...

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Main Authors: Dauda, Sharafa, Omar, Bahiyah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/35853/
http://eprints.usm.my/35853/1/News_sourcing_GMJ%28M%27sia_ed%29_2015.pdf
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author Dauda, Sharafa
Omar, Bahiyah
author_facet Dauda, Sharafa
Omar, Bahiyah
author_sort Dauda, Sharafa
building USM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This article uses online news of the 2011 Somali famine, a humanitarian disaster, to investigate the role of alternative transnational news agencies and Western mainstream news agencies in attributing news to sources. The study concludes that Panapress, an African news agency, originally positioned to challenge Western mainstream media narratives, is doing the opposite by supplementing Reuters’ narrative, hence entrenching homogenization of news flow. The study finds that advocacy/ humanitarian groups were the dominant news sources used by both news agencies, indicating resources are at their disposal and that they have the capacity to pool them to mitigate the consequences of the famine. The results also show the use of news sources by Panapress was limited to advocacy/ humanitarian organizations and foreign dignitaries/ leaders only, and failed to cover victims and other groups affected by the famine.
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spelling usm-358532017-07-25T09:36:11Z http://eprints.usm.my/35853/ NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS Dauda, Sharafa Omar, Bahiyah P87-96 Communication. Mass media This article uses online news of the 2011 Somali famine, a humanitarian disaster, to investigate the role of alternative transnational news agencies and Western mainstream news agencies in attributing news to sources. The study concludes that Panapress, an African news agency, originally positioned to challenge Western mainstream media narratives, is doing the opposite by supplementing Reuters’ narrative, hence entrenching homogenization of news flow. The study finds that advocacy/ humanitarian groups were the dominant news sources used by both news agencies, indicating resources are at their disposal and that they have the capacity to pool them to mitigate the consequences of the famine. The results also show the use of news sources by Panapress was limited to advocacy/ humanitarian organizations and foreign dignitaries/ leaders only, and failed to cover victims and other groups affected by the famine. 2015 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/35853/1/News_sourcing_GMJ%28M%27sia_ed%29_2015.pdf Dauda, Sharafa and Omar, Bahiyah (2015) NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS. Global Media Journal, 5 (1). pp. 77-97. ISSN 2231-9948
spellingShingle P87-96 Communication. Mass media
Dauda, Sharafa
Omar, Bahiyah
NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS
title NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS
title_full NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS
title_fullStr NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS
title_full_unstemmed NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS
title_short NEWS SOURCING OF THE 2011 SOMALI FAMINE: A COMPARISON BETWEEN PANAPRESS AND REUTERS
title_sort news sourcing of the 2011 somali famine: a comparison between panapress and reuters
topic P87-96 Communication. Mass media
url http://eprints.usm.my/35853/
http://eprints.usm.my/35853/1/News_sourcing_GMJ%28M%27sia_ed%29_2015.pdf