Rise of NGOs as News Providers

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    1/30

    The Rise of NGOs as Alternative News Providers

    By Melissa Wall

    California State University Northridge

    A paper presented to the annual conference of the

    International Communication Association, May 26-30, 2005, New York.

    Abstract: This study assesses three Non-Governmental Organizations (Electronic Iraq, Global

    Exchange and OneWorld), as alternative international news providers. While Global Exchangeturned to mainstream media for its information, the other two relied on news produced by other

    NGOs and the United Nations or collected and reported it themselves. The latter two also morefrequently quoted alternative sources such as citizens. Ultimately, these NGOs represent a new

    sort of news provider international non-profits, embodying different news values and practices

    than corporate media.

    1

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    2/30

    In the last two decades, there has been a remarkable increase in the numbers, activities

    and influences of Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs) around the world (Fisher, 1998;

    Kaldor, 2003; Rodgers, 2003; Warkentin, 2001). Working in numerous arenas, often in place of

    governments which have abdicated many of their social service functions, NGOs are now said to

    employ more people than the largest private sector firms in many countries (Handbook on

    nonprofit institutions, 2003). Their expertise and advocacy functions have increasingly made

    them players at UN summits and other gatherings of the worlds leaders. Indeed, well known

    NGOs such as Amnesty International and Greenpeace are seen as more credible by the general

    public than global corporations such as Ford or Microsoft that have spent millions building their

    brand names (De Jonquieres, 2000). Although the term NGO encompasses a diverse spectrum of

    organizations and agendas that is difficult to define, observers agree NGOs are now believed to

    constitute a global associational revolution (Kaldor, 2003; Salamon, Anheier & Associates,

    1998).

    2

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    3/30

    The effects of this revolution are subject to debate but it is helpful to group thinking

    concerning this phenomenon into two main schools (acknowledging obviously that many

    opinions may fall somewhere between them): The optimists describe NGOs as flexible, creative,

    fast acting and motivated by social and not commercial concerns. They see NGOs as key tenants

    in the civil sphere of society, a bulwark against governments and corporations that would

    otherwise overlook if not exploit ordinary people (Warkentin, 2001; Mater, 2001). Much

    literature associates them with providing a voice for non-elites in the public sphere,

    characterizing their work as a public good increasingly made available on a global basis

    (Warkentin, 2001; Mater, 2001). The other school of thought suggests that NGOs, particularly

    those operating in the international arena, are hand maidens of the powers that be. Their entry

    into social services legitimizes governments elimination of public services, and they serve as

    Trojan horses for privatization, deregulation and corporate takeovers of the worlds resources,

    bringing homogenizing Western values to the rest of the world (Carapico, 2000; de Waal, 2002;

    Lovink, 2002). In communicating their messages, they often de-humanize the very people they

    are supposed to help (Lidchi, 1999).

    3

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    4/30

    Whichever view one takes, one thing is certain: With a few exceptions, NGO activities

    have been under-researched in mass communication, particularly in terms of their relationship to

    news. It is the contention of this paper that some NGOs have begun collecting, constructing and

    distributing news to an extent that they might be thought of now as a new form of news producer

    (Smith & Smythe, 2001; Wall, 2002). While this might be said of various other non-news

    entities in society, some of the key characteristics of NGOs make them particularly important to

    consider, especially for researchers interested in international communication. Thus, this article

    aims to take a step toward rectifying this dearth of knowledge by first outlining some evidence

    that NGOs are news producers, then assessing three cases to illustrate potential areas of concern

    for future research of NGOs as news media.

    Changing roles of journalism

    4

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    5/30

    The broader context for this paper is the idea that journalism itself is undergoing

    immense transformations. These well documented changes have come about for a number of

    reasons ranging from media monopolies to new technologies (Bagdikian,2004; Kovach &

    Rosenstiel, 2001;McChesney, 2004; Pavlik, 2001) Conglomerate control has increasingly led to

    a journalism that values infotainment and celebrity news at the expensive of more serious and

    expensive-to-collect information and, especially, international information (Kovach &

    Rosenstiel, 2001). Cost-cutting and other measures have led to an increase in news media

    reliance and obedience to corporate and governmental providers of pre-packaged information

    such as video news releases that news media pass off as their own work, practices that the public

    is often unaware of. Likewise, popular news providers such as U.S. cable television have been

    documented as relying primarily on reporters and anchors opinion with few sources to back up

    what they report (State of the Media,2005). These and other such manipulative practices have

    meant that journalism has less and less room for so-called hard news much less news that

    challenges the status quo. The mainstream news media themselves have seen that their work

    increasingly does not connect with audiences and have invoked reforms such as the civic

    journalism movement which sought cosmetic but not structural changes. This failure of

    mainstream media to stand up to the government and corporations or to simply cover important

    news at all has opened a space for other sources of information that do not come from what we

    have traditionally thought of as news producers (Schechter, 2003; Wall, 2002). Indeed, the lack

    of access to media production for ordinary citizens has led some researchers to describe the rise

    of black market or informal journalism to counter the failure of the market (Wall, 2004).

    5

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    6/30

    The rise of these new news creators such as blogs, wikis and other channels, has been

    facilitated by new technologies, most especially the Internet, although obviously political, social

    and even cultural changes also play important roles. Researchers are now turning their attention

    to these alternative producers in an attempt to make sense of what they mean for the journalism

    of the future. Deuze (2003) suggests that the migration of journalism to the Internet has

    produced not a single journalism, but multiple journalisms, each characterized by different

    values. As the internet has allowed non-journalists at least for the moment to potentially

    globally distribute their information, observers such as Williams and Delli Carpini (2000) argue

    that there are no longer any gatekeepers, and Bruns (2003) even suggests that web users

    themselves have become what he calls gatewatchers, immensely broadening the range of

    materials being made available. Other research suggests that traditional journalism was a

    modernist product and we are now seeing the rise of a post-modern journalism, reflected in some

    of these new practices (Wall, 2005). Because this paper focuses on NGOs, of particular interest

    are those online news providers who are also seeking to implement social changes, which I have

    previously argued may be creating an alternative information sphere that will further

    contribute to redefining news (Wall, 2003, p. 121).

    6

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    7/30

    NGOs defined

    What exactly, then, is an NGO? NGOs are difficult to define in part because they seem

    to encompass such a large range of entities. By many definitions, NGOs include everything

    from sports clubs to trade groups funded by corporations, from small kinship burial societies to

    enormous relief and development agencies. The term NGO itself is often used interchangeably

    with other terms such as private voluntary organization (PVO) and nonprofit organization

    (NPO). In Western Europe it generally means internationally active nonprofits; in Eastern

    Europe, it means all charitable and nonprofit organizations, while in the Southern Hemisphere, it

    is generally associated with development organizations (Fisher, 1998). Common definitions of

    NGOs describe them as private, nonprofit, voluntary and self-governing organizations(Clarke,1995; Davenport, 2002; Fisher, 1998).

    7

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    8/30

    While we often tend to think of NGOs as being involved in social service roles, some

    carry out activities that center around the collection and distribution of information. This

    includes serving as educators and watchdogs as well as agenda setters (Davenport, 2002; Kaldor,

    2003; Mater, 2001; Warkentin, 2001). In terms of the former, one of the primary roles of many

    NGOs is to collect and distribute information with the goals of widening public participation,

    informing officials or making available information unavailable through mainstream media

    channels. NGOs have also long been known as watchdogs, collecting information that is used to

    monitor governments, international organizations, corporations and sometimes the traditional

    news media itself (Naidoo, 2000). Whether monitoring treaty negotiations or conducting field

    visits for official reports on issues such as a country's human rights violations, NGOs have been

    described as communities of experts outside the state, who can provide surveillance that can

    potentially prevent abuse (Cohen, 2001). NGOs often help shape or reshape public agendas

    (Albin, 1999; Mathews, 1997).They may provide alternative frames for issues, foster new

    identities, redefine solutions or confer legitimacy on new ideas or policies (Keck & Sikkink,

    1998; Warkentin, 2001).

    NGO as news media

    8

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    9/30

    What makes the idea that NGOs are operating as news media so intriguing is the

    possibility that because they are said to operate from a different set of values than mainstream

    commercial media, the news they create would potentially be different as well. For example, in

    what ways does their non-profit status affect their news? This is an important question because

    so much of the critique of mainstream news has centered around its for-profit status with

    research suggesting that advertisers and commercial interests are increasingly influential in news

    selection (Bagdikian, 2004;McChesney, 2004). Does NGO news mainly promote the NGO

    itself or are they simply providing information? Are there other forces shaping or influencing

    NGO news that are equivalent to advertisers? In addition, we might ask whether NGOs

    distribute their news freely. Increasingly, mainstream media are looking to models in which they

    will sell their online news, even though critics such as Lawrence Lessig (2004) maintain that the

    most effective models of distribution of the future may well be those that make information

    freely available. This issue continues to play out in terms of music, and it is likely to become

    increasingly important for news as well.

    9

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    10/30

    A second area of interest is whose voices are represented within NGO news. These

    groups have long claimed to speak for and represent the marginalized and oppressed (Courville

    & Piper, 2004). Are those voices found within their news? Certainly, we know that mainstream

    media consistently to elite voices to represent elite concerns (Herman & Chomsky, 1988). Do

    we see some of the problems identified with NGO publicity materials which have been accused,

    particularly in the international arena, of exploiting tragedy and poverty in order to generate

    more donations? Finally, some NGOs are described as advocacy organizations (although this is

    a complicated issue in places such as the United States where they can educate but must stay

    within certain boundaries to avoid losing their non-profit status). Mainstream media base much

    of their credibility on the notion that they do not take sides but remain objective when reporting

    the news. This has often resulted in articles that tell only two sides to a multi-sided issue or

    which even give credence to a second side which is clearly based on lies or fabrications. Does

    the news NGOs produce reflect their advocacy roles? Is there an attempt to tell both sides or,

    instead, is there a mobilization element within their news? And if that is the case, how is that

    done?

    Framework for analysis

    10

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    11/30

    As noted earlier, the cultural category of NGOs is remarkably broad and consists of such

    a diverse range of entities, that trying to generalize can prove difficult. Simply drawing a

    random sample of NGOs has frustrated researchers (Jha-Nambiar, 2004). As my questions in

    this exploratory article are to identify and try to better understand the news values of NGOs, a

    group of NGOs was purposively selected. Three different NGOs currently distributing news are

    examined here. These were chosen in two cases because they have self-identified the production

    of news as their main activity. A third NGO was selected which does not claim this as a main

    activity, but in fact collects and distributes news as another element in its mission. While a more

    extended study of these and other organizations should be conducted in the future, for now, this

    snapshot should help us think about the questions posed above in a more concrete manner. The

    NGOs with news production as their main mission are OneWorld.net and Electronic Iraq. The

    Third NGO is Global Exchange. What each of these shares is an international focus. This might

    especially make their news functions important as the corporate news media, particularly in the

    U.S., has been described as neglecting international reporting in recent years (outside of the

    Anglo-American terror wars). Each NGO is further detailed below.

    11

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    12/30

    One World Describing itself as a civil society network online, supporting peoples

    media to help build a more just global society, OneWorld focuses particularly on sustainable

    development and human rights (OneWorld, n.d., para. 1). Headquartered in London, the website

    was formed in 1995 and appears in 11 different languages. It features regional editions and what

    it calls thematic channels. Its mission statement says that OneWorld brings you the latest news,

    action, campaigns and organisations in human rights and global issues . . . Many of these are

    produced from the South to widen the participation of the world's poorest and marginalised

    peoples in the global debate(Where are you?, 2005, para. 1-2). It includes a page called

    Editorial Standards which makes clear that it seeks stories ignored by mainstream media, focuses

    on context as opposed to crisis and does not allow funding to influence its content.

    Electronic Iraq Electronic Iraq describes itself as a news portal and it too only exists

    online as an information delivery system. It was founded by the sponsors of a similar website,

    Electronic Intifada, as well as Palestinian diaspora and the peace activist group, Voices in the

    Wilderness which is based in the US and UK, in 2003 to provide alternative information about

    the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq. It describes itself this way: Visitors got a never before

    seen glimpse of war and its aftermath through the eyes of peace activists based at ground zero

    (About this project: Introduction, n.d., para. 3). In explaining how information is selected for

    inclusion, the site notes that: Except for theIraq Diaries section of our site, which actively

    solicits submissions from members of delegations and other visitors to Iraq, it is expected that

    contributions to the rest of Electronic Iraq are from people with some professional or academic

    interest in the country, including journalists writing articles in the commercial media(About this

    project: Guidelines for content submission, n.d., para. 9)

    12

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    13/30

    Global Exchange Global Exchange is a San Francisco-based non-profit that focuses on

    human rights and social and environmental justices issues. Founded in 1988, Global Exchange is

    different from the others in that news provision is a secondary service on its website and in that

    is primarily a real world entity rather than virtual. It has been particularly active in the global

    justice movement and in the peace movement that emerged in late 2002 to counter the Anglo-

    American attack on Iraq. They describe their mission as to increase global awareness among

    the U.S. public while building partnerships around the world (About Global Exchange, 2005,

    para 1). The organization sponsors several kinds of educational activities including learning

    tours to Third World counties; virtual and real world stores selling fair trade coffee, chocolates,

    etc. Its main page features a link to Weekly News, a roundup of stories that have some

    connection to their various topic area pages of interest such as the WTO or Cuba.

    Each organizations website was examined in the following ways. Each sites Top

    News/Current News sections were visited once a week between March 25 and April 20, 2005 for

    a total of 5 weeks. Employing content analysis, the following questions were asked of these

    pages:

    Who produces the news on these pages? Producers were coded into the following

    categories: Govt., Media, NGOs, Unions, United Nations, Other.

    Who is quoted in the stories that run on the top news pages? Sources were coded into the

    following categories: Govt., Media, NGOs, Ordinary citizens, Unions, United Nations, Other.

    Beyond focusing on the Top News pages, the following questions were asked about each

    site in general:

    13

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    14/30

    Are there any ads on the site?

    Are visitors required to register to visit the site?

    Does content appear to market the NGO? That is, do stories provide information about

    issues or are they simply promotional pieces for the group which sponsors the site?

    In what ways, if any, does advocacy play a role on the site?

    Findings

    It appears that these NGOs are producing news that is somewhat different from the

    mainstream news media. These differences range from who is contributing the items to sources

    being quoted.

    Producers Several patterns are visible in terms of who is producing the articles that are

    posted on these sites. The two sites, OneWorld and Electronic Iraq, which describe themselves

    as information portals rely more on non-traditional producers of information. The NGO which

    describes itself as educational but not media-oriented tended to rely on news media articles much

    more. The results are summarized in Table 1 below.

    14

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    15/30

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    16/30

    Producers OneWorld Global Exchange Electronic Iraq

    NGOs 39% (27) 13% (8) 27% (7)

    Self 20% (14) 1% (1) 19% (5)

    Media 23%916) 86% (54) 12% (3)

    United Nations 14% (10) 0% (0) 42% (11)

    Unions 4% (3) 0% (0) 0% (0)

    OneWorld purports to be an NGO gateway and thus it should be no surprise that the site

    relies heavily on NGOs (39%) materials. Likewise, Electronic Iraqs mission is to deliver a

    different point of view on the war against and occupation of Iraq, and so NGOs (27%) and the

    UN (42%) are the most frequent producers of their news. What is of further note here is that

    both sites are providing some of their own content as well. For One World, their global network

    produced here 20% of their news postings. For Electronic Iraq which produced 19% of its own

    news articles, this works in part by employing material from free-lance reporters and others

    based in Iraq but also through the production of their own Iraqi Diaries which provide first-

    hand reports from peace activists facilitated by the sites co-sponsor, Voices in the Wilderness. If

    all of these sites relied only on their own materials, they would be significantly less substantial

    than they are, but like a newspaper or other news outlet using wire services, syndicates etc., they

    are pulling from other information providers such as the news service IRIN, run by the United

    Nations, which established this wire-agency like service to focus on crisis areas particularly in

    poorer regions of the world.

    16

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    17/30

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    18/30

    Table 2 Sources quoted in articles

    18

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    19/30

    Sources One world Global Exchange Electronic Iraq

    Business 1% (2) 5% (8) 0% (0)

    Citizens 22% (32) 17% (28) 34% (25)

    Govt/military/politicians 28% (40) 39% (65) 37% (27)

    Media (includes books) 5% (7) 7% (11) 10% (7)

    NGOs/coalitions/networks 24% (35) 19% (31) 10% (7)

    Think tank/academic 4% (6) 8% (13) 1% (1)

    Unions 3% (4) 1% (10) 0% (0)

    United Nations 11% (16) 1% (1) 4% (3)

    Religious 0% (0) 2% (4) 1% (1)

    Other 2% (3) 3% (5) 3% (2)

    19

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    20/30

    TOTAL 100% (145) 100% (167) 100% (73)

    These findings also suggest that to a certain extent the same sort of sources found in

    mainstream media are still being used by these alternative NGO sites. While there are

    differences between the websites, if the top three sources (government, citizens and NGOs) are

    grouped together, the sites are fairly similar in who they quoted. Not unexpectedly, Global

    Exchange has the largest number of governmental sources as the majority of its stories are from

    the mainstream news media. For each site, governmental sources are quoted most frequently;

    however, both OneWorld and Electronic Iraq also draw frequently on other types of sources. For

    OneWorld, NGOs (24%) are their second most frequently cited source with Citizens at 22%.

    This suggests that NGOs and Citizens are seen as nearly as important and authoritative as

    governmental sources. With a little over a third of their sources as Citizens, Electronic Iraq

    quotes ordinary people almost twice as often as Global Exchange which relies on mainstream

    media to produce its content. Allowing ordinary people peace activists to contribute content

    may have resulted in their seeking out other ordinary people Iraqis to interview and this

    appears to account for the differences. Interestingly, the United Nations was not a major source

    for any of the sites.

    What this suggests is that these NGOs might indeed be providing a different sort of voice

    on their sites than is typically found in mainstream media, particularly media focusing on

    international news and related issues. It should be noted that the use of press releases, statements

    and other similar materials may have resulted in fewer sources overall as those materials

    oftentimes did not quote sources but rather carried statements from their producers. This may

    indicate a decline in the future of directly quoted sources as audiences come to expect more

    direct statements; however, that is unclear.

    20

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    21/30

    Advocacy Clearly, these sites as a whole were not aiming for complete objectivity. All

    the sites has advocacy elements on them, directing visitors where and how to take action related

    to information of interest to the site. Electronic Iraq also offered separate sections for its

    Activism pages as well as a separate page offering opinions called Opinion/Editorial. One World

    also runs an article each day on its home page with the news items, but this one is labeled as

    Opinion and Analysis as well as a mobilizing item called Take Action. A typical example of

    the latter was the call for activists to flood Congress with calls opposing the Patriot Act put out

    by Amnesty International. Global Exchange encourages activism throughout its site, but did not

    blatantly so do on the news pages examined here. So that while each site encouraged citizen

    activism, most news articles did not. Use of press releases meant that both sides did not

    always get told, but producers of such releases were always labeled, allowing readers the chance

    to make their own judgments as to their credibility.

    21

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    22/30

    Other qualitiesNone of the sites requires visitors to register to read their main news.

    There are no advertisements on the sites. Electronic Iraq does have a page where they post

    stories about Electronic Iraq that appear in the mainstream news media, while Global Exchange

    has a page that features its own press releases. Yet none of the sites require visitors to wade

    through such material to reach news items. Thus, it would be possible to visit any of these sites

    and get a free news update about international issues of concern. Interestingly, only OneWorld

    allows for significant visitor contributions. OneWorld Radio and OneWorld Television allows

    anyone to post audio or video to their site, although one must first join (membership is free) and

    content must focus on promoting human rights and/or sustainable development. In addition,

    members can freely download other organizations or other individuals audio content. Content

    appears to often be along the lines of public service announcements such as radio ads about the

    dangers of AIDs recorded in South Africa.

    Conclusions

    22

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    23/30

    While certainly every NGO is not going to be interested in or devote time to collecting

    news, there does appear to be a growing number that are taking on news provision functions. A

    quick scan of NGOs reveals various examples ranging from the Sierra Clubs Daily Scoop, a

    blog-like look at environmental news items, to the Rainforest Action Network, which provides

    breaking news and feature feeds from various news media on its homepage. The presence of

    these functions comes not simply from capabilities made possible by the Internet, although that

    certainly plays a role, but by the failure of mainstream media to comprehensively cover serious

    issues, especially those in the international realm. Particularly for US audiences, there has been

    a well documented cutback in foreign reporting so that American audiences are left without a

    basic understanding of what is happening in an ever more complicated and connected world. The

    shift toward entertainment and celebrity news seems to have left audiences for serious

    information turning to other sources.

    23

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    24/30

    Several possible trends seem apparent from this analysis. First, news hierarchies seem to

    be changing. Mainstream news entities are not necessarily seen as the only or the most credible

    sources of news. This has been suggested by earlier research and seems to be confirmed here.

    While various news services such as Agence France Presse or Associated Press are said to be

    considering actions to stop Google, Yahoo and others from redistributing their work without

    paying for it, other non-news entities are producing information which may well replace some

    wire service stories and certainly has widened the range of sources that can not only be consulted

    by audiences but that can be used to supplement NGO and other alternative news producers

    information sites. Of course, whether large audiences will pay attention to these NGO sites is an

    important question, and some critics argue that such alternatives will still be marginalized by

    mainstream information producers and distributors and perhaps Internet Service Providers

    (Dalhberg, 2005).

    A second point is that at least in the cases examined here, this information is being

    provided without cost to audiences; indeed they are not required to register or in other ways

    supply information to the NGO. These two characteristics might also be characteristic of other

    new online news forms such as blogs, but there seems to be a difference. Here, the news

    producers are turning to sources that often have broad international credibility NGOs and the

    UN for example. These sources are following professional communication forms and practices

    in a way that bloggers often do not. The sites own contributors tend to be experts within their

    area, and while the sites may not be completely balanced, they often tend to provide some

    distance from their subjects (with the exception of the Iraqi Diaries). They are in a word,

    professional. They also differ from blogs in that they consistently connect their work with

    concrete political actions that visitors can take, providing clear instructions on how to do so.

    24

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    25/30

    Finally, what seems to be of further importance here is that these NGO sites, particularly

    the two information portals, do not appear to be employing a national lens for their information.

    That is, much international news has been characterized as nationalistic at heart and to be

    reported historically by entities such as press agencies that were tied to a specific country,

    ultimately reflecting its values. These NGO sites suggest instead a sort of post-national

    framework for information, particularly OneWorld with its multiple nodes. Electronic Iraq

    seems to a certain extent to also adopt a post-place identity. These sites suggest that NGO news

    might also offer new frames for news that could contribute to what Appadurai (1996) has

    identified as post-national allegiances here to human rights, social justice and other similar

    values, ultimately contributing to new forms of not only news production but of political and

    social actions.

    25

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    26/30

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    27/30

    Dahlber, L. (1995). The corporate colonization of online attention and the marginalization of

    critical communication? Journal of Communication Inquiry, 29(2), 160-180.

    Davenport, D. (2002, December). The new diplomacy (alliance of NGOS and small and

    medium sized nations)Policy Review, pp. 17-31.

    De Jonquieres, G. (2000, Dec. 6). NGOs in winning battle to sway opinion, Financial Times.

    De Waal, A. (2002). Media wars and the humanitarian (non)-intervention; an interview

    with Thomas Keenan. In G. Lovink (ed). Uncanny networks; dialogues with the

    virtual intelligentsia (pp. 214-223). Cambridge: MIT Press.

    Deuze, M. (2003). The web and its journalisms: Considering the consequences of different types

    of news media online.New Media & Society 5(2).

    Fisher, J. (1998) Nongovernments: NGOs and the political development of the Third

    World. West Hartford, Conn.: Kumarian Press.

    Handbook on nonprofit institutions in the system of national accounts. (2003). New York:

    United Nations.

    Herman, E. & Chomsky, N. (1988). Manufacturing consent: The political economy of the mass

    media. New York: Pantheon Books.

    Jha-Nambiar, S. (2004, May). Getting organized: The Internet as a tool for empowerment and

    mobilization for US non-profits. A paper presented to the annual meeting of the

    International Communication Association, New Orleans.

    Kaldor, M. (2003). Global civil society; an answer to war. Cambridge: Polity.

    Kaul, I. (2001). Global public goods: What role for civil society? Nonprofit and Voluntary

    Sector Quarterly 30(3): 588-602.

    Keck, M., & Sikkink, K. (1998). Activists beyond borders. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

    27

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    28/30

    Kovach, B., & Rosenstiel, T. (2001). The elements of journalism; what news people should

    know and what the public should expect. New York: Crown Publishers.

    Lessig, L. (2004).Free culture: How big media uses technology and the law to lock down

    culture and control creativity. New York: Penguin.

    Lidchi, H. (1999). Finding the right image; British development NGOs and the regulation

    of imagery. In T. Skelton & T. Allen (eds.) Culture and global change (pp. 87-

    101). London: Routledge.

    Lovink, G. (2002). Dark fiber; tracking critical Internet culture. Cambridge, MA: MIT

    Press.

    Mater, M. A. (2001). A structural transformation for a global public sphere? In R. Asen

    & D. C. Brouwer (eds.), Counterpublics and the state (pp. 211-234). Albany: State

    University of New York Press

    McChesney, R. (2004). The problem of the media : U.S. communication politics in the twenty-

    first century.New York: Monthly Review Press.

    Naidoo, K. (2000, May 8). NGOs should be made more effective in strengthening

    democracy: The new civic globalism, The Nation, p. 34.

    Oneworld.net. (n.d.). Retrieved January 14, 2005 from

    http://www.oneworld.net/article/frontpage/2/2333.

    Pavlik, J. (2001). Journalism and new media. Columbia: Columbia University Press.

    Rodgers, J. (2003) Spatializing international politics: Analyzing NGOs use of the Internet.

    London: Routledge.

    Rogers, R. (2003). All-American issues: Seven stories from the Homeland. Retrieved March 12,

    2005 from www.issuenetwork.org/node.php?id=46.

    28

  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    29/30

    Salamon, L. M., Anheier, H. K., & Associates. (1998). The emerging sector revisited.

    Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies Center for Civil

    Society Studies.

    Schecter, D. (2003). Media wars: News at a time of terror. Lanham, Md.: Rowman &

    Littlefield.

    Smith, P. J., & Smythe, E. (February 2001). Sleepless in Seattle: Challenging the WTO in a

    globalizing world, A paper presented at the 42nd International Studies Association

    Conference, Chicago.

    State of the media. (2005). The Project for Excellence in Journalism. Retrieved from

    www.stateofthemedia.org, March 18, 2005.

    Wall, M. A. (2002). The Battle in Seattle: How Nongovernmental Organizations used websites

    in their challenge to the WTO. In E. Gilboa (Ed.), Media and conflict; framing issues,

    making policy, shaping opinions (pp. 25-44). Ardsley, NY: Transnational Publishers.

    Wall, M. A. (2003). Social movements and the net: Activist journalism goes digital. In K.

    Kawamoto (ed.)Digital journalism; emerging media and the changing horizons of

    journalism (pp 113-122). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

    Wall, M.A. (2004). Blogs as black market journalism: A new paradigm for news. Berglund

    Center for Internet Studies. Retrieved April 3, 2004 from

    http://bcis.pacificu.edu/journal/2004/02/wall.php.

    Wall, M.A. (2005). Blogs of war: Weblogs as news.Journalism: Theory, Criticism and Practice.

    6(2).

    Warkentin, C. (2001). Reshaping world politics: NGOs, the internet, and global civil society.

    29

    http://www.stateofthemedia.org/http://bcis.pacificu.edu/journal/2004/02/wall.phphttp://www.stateofthemedia.org/http://bcis.pacificu.edu/journal/2004/02/wall.php
  • 8/9/2019 Rise of NGOs as News Providers

    30/30

    Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

    Where are you? (2005, Jan. 14). Oneworld.net. Retrieved January 14, 2005 from

    http://www.oneworld.net/.

    Williams, B. A. & Delli Carpini, M. X. (2000) Unchained reaction: The collapse of media

    gatekeeping and the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal.Journalism: Theory, Practice and

    Criticism, 1(1), 61-85.