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Index
Cover
Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction: The Extent, Decadence and Surge of Development Aid through the Media
List of Acronyms
1 International Communication and Arab Countries: Studies on Media Development and Media Geopolitics
1.1. Communication for development in France: an imported subdiscipline?
1.2. Development and geopolitics: two distinct matters?
1.3. In the beginning: (Arab) media and development
1.4. Academic publications on Arab media: from scarcity to profusion
1.5. Arab media: from official speeches to the domination of the Anglo-American pragmatic school
1.6. The 2000s: renewal of research or “Al Jazeerazation” of the academic literature?
1.7. The uninhibited liberalization of the media
1.8. An interest in Arab public opinion, a rarity of work on audiences
1.9. Has the media and development relationship been abandoned to think-tanks in the Internet age?
1.10. The renewal of a field of study or journalism for the development of investigative journalism
2 The Obsolescence of Classical Theories of International Communication
2.1. Modernization by the media or “westoxification”?
2.2. Development is not an exportable product
2.3. The dependency theory
2.4. Impetus for a NWICO
2.5. The “too sage” report of the Sages
3 The Information Society or the Liberal Remodeling of Development Theories
3.1. A global trend: the paradigm of a more “inclusive” information society
3.2. Progress: an accounting measure?
3.3. Arab countries in the “information society”
3.4. Young graduates – and connected in a precarious economic context
3.5. The use of digital media and social networks
3.6. The advertising market, between certain delay and rapid growth
4 In the Field: Liberalization Under the Control of Governments and Businessmen
4.1. Businessmen and the media in Egypt: a typology
4.2. Reforms and routines
4.3. The confluence of the media
5 The “Arab Street” in the Press: a Specific Frame of the South
5.1. From public opinion to the “Arab street”
5.2. The “Arab street” in the French press: presentation of general trends
5.3. Original matrices and perspectives for the appreciation of the “Arab street”
5.4. The use of “Arab street” in the press: from the beginning to today
5.5. The media “spawning” of September 11, 2001
5.6. 2011: revolutions and the Arab street
5.7. Conclusion: the Arab street, Arab “revolutions” and “embedded” social movements
6 Geopolitics of the Arabic-speaking Media and Politics of Influence
6.1. Media geopolitics in the Middle East and North Africa: radio propaganda warfare
6.2. From the Gulf War to 9/11 as triggers for new media geopolitics
6.3. Paradigm shifts in cooperative action in the field of media and journalism
6.4. Public policies under pressure
7 Cooperation and Training of Journalists in the Digital Media Era
7.1. “All equal in the face of innovation?”
7.2. Training of journalists in Arab countries
8 Development Policy and Journalism: Between Standards Competition and Cooperation
8.1. Different visions and cooperation agencies
8.2. Cooperation policies “from the bottom up”
8.3. Media development assistance: the convergence of practices and standards
8.4. Concerted actions and expertise: the case of Canal France International
8.5. Conclusion
Conclusion
From representations to Arab “revolutions”
(Re)thinking development through the media
Geopolitics of the media in the Mediterranean: a multipolar space
Pragmatic and inclusive cooperation
Journalism: a privileged field
As close as possible to the public
Three types of difficulties
References
Index
End User License Agreement
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