Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Room
Browse By Division
Browse By Session Type
Search Tips
Personal Schedule
Sign In
The paper investigates the role perceptions journalists have when reporting on democratisation conflicts and which challenges are connected with them. It discusses the tensions between these journalistic ideals and the structural constraints they face inside and outside the media organisation, and how this interplay impacts on journalistic performance and the overall nature of journalism’s role within democratisation processes. It outlines a contextualised concept of conflict(-sensitive) journalism in transitional societies which introduces “oscillating” journalistic roles as one core characteristic of journalism in transitional and conflict context.
The research is based on a comparative case study which interviewed 100 professional journalists who covered a set of democratisation conflicts in Egypt, Kenya, Serbia and South Africa.