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Zusatztext 'Shawna M. Brandle's innovative and meticulous content analysis of U.S. and British TV news documents the shockingly sparse coverage of human rights issues around the world that leaves the general public clueless about the frequency and severity of human rights violations and decision-makers free of pressure to do more than pay lip service to these problems. While crime and terrorism in the West tend to be over-covered! human rights violations are rarely televised according to the research presented here. This is an important book that is especially recommended for the fields of communication! journalism! political science! and human rights studies.' - Brigitte Nacos! Columbia University'In this timely new work! Professor Brandle reminds us there are few things more important than human rights. By short-changing news coverage of human rights! media organizations fail to discourage the violence and also limit public outrage over under-covered atrocities. This book is a crucial study of how little we are told about a recurring global danger.' -Stephen Farnsworth! Professor of Political Science and Director of the University of Mary Washington's Center for Leadership and Media Studies'Brandle's quantitative study analyzed 20 years of film footage using several different types of content analyses. Her results reveal a sparse coverage of human rights by the media of these two countries. Thus! she argues! viewers in these two industrialized nations are provided with very limited knowledge of actual situations! particularly in Third World countries. This study on international communication is extremely focused! and should appeal to a very specific audience. It should especially interest scholars of international studies! political science! and journalism... Summing Up: Recommended.' - R. Ray! CHOICE Informationen zum Autor Shawna M. Brandle is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Kingsborough Community College, New York. Her interests include media and international relations. Klappentext Bridging across the disciplines of human rights studies, comparative politics, and communication studies in a way that has not been done, this book looks at television news coverage of human rights in the US and UK to answer the question of whether the CNN Effect actually does occur. Zusammenfassung Does the CNN Effect exist? Political communications scholars have debated the influence of television news coverage on international affairs since television news began, especially in relation to the coverage of massive human rights violations. These debates have only intensified in the last 20 years, as new technologies have changed the nature of news and the news cycle. But despite frequent assertion, little research into the CNN Effect, or whether television coverage of human rights violations causes state action, exists. Bridging across the disciplines of human right studies, comparative politics, and communication studies in a way that has not been done, this book looks at television news coverage of human rights in the US and UK to answer the question of whether the CNN Effect actually exists. Examining the human rights content in television news in the US and UK yields insights to what television news producers and policy makers consider to be human rights, and what, if anything, audiences can learn about human rights from watching television news. After reviewing 20 years of footage using three different types of content analyses of American television news broadcasts and two different types of British news broadcasts, and comparing those results with human rights rankings and print news coverage of human rights, Shawns M. Brandle concludes that despite rhetoric from both countries in support of human rights, there is not enough coverage of human rights in either country to argue that television media can spur state action on human righ...