Articles

The Impact of blogging on domestic and international politics: Networked Journalism

Charlie Beckett • Jan 7 2008 • Articles

There are few more circular arguments than those that spiral around the impact of media upon politics. And as soon as you mention New Media that circle turns in to a vicious or virtuous cycle depending on your view. Internet Evangelists like Joe Trippi claim that blogging, email, websites, and social networking are transforming political communications. That in turn is changing the process of politics and politics itself.

Youth Culture and the EU

Rupa Huq • Jan 4 2008 • Articles

While Europe’s carbon-footprint aware heads of states, their administrators, advisors, bureaucrats, translators and drivers have been preoccupied with two back to back summits in Lisbon and Brussels, smaller cogs in the EU machine have been whirring away less noisily.

Pakistan: A Martial Show

Mohammad Ali • Dec 29 2007 • Articles

Pakistan came into being out of a nationalist cause; the ethnic Muslim minority felt that its rights would be better preserved and served under a separate democratic setup, rather than among an overwhelming majority of Hindus. Great Britain also wanted a buffer state between the Muslim belt and India to save the Sub-Continent (which contained a quarter of the world’s population) from the effects of ‘Islamization’ and to ensure that it never emerged as a challenging power to British ambitions in the East (the Middle East, Hong Kong, Burma and Japan to name a few).

Broadcasting Values: Engaging with Alternative Interpretations of World Politics

Adam Groves • Nov 28 2007 • Articles

During World War II, the BBC represented a crucial arm of UK foreign policy, broadcasting allied propaganda across occupied Europe. Sixty years later the organisation has developed an international reputation for impartiality, yet ‘BBC World Service’ still plays an important role in transmitting ‘British’ values across the globe.

Solidarity manifest in Urban Ghana

Peter Brett • Nov 16 2007 • Articles

‘We believe in sharing, and we want what our God has put in us to be seen’. The entire group nods in agreement with the words of William Mensah, founder of the Pace Setters youth group. Arriving late he is the last member to take a seat in the dimly lit schoolroom that is the group’s regular Sunday afternoon meeting place. His audience comprises around twenty inhabitants, all in their early twenties, of Sukura, an impoverished suburb of the Ghanaian capital Accra. Set up last year to combat a perceived growth of social problems in the area, the group has already become renowned locally for its zeal and effectiveness.

Fair use

John Groves • Nov 15 2007 • Articles

e-IR is not an essay bank. The essays have been contributed by students strictly as academic exercises; we intend them to provide an accessible route into interesting debates, and to be examples of the scholarly work conducted by students of higher education institutions. The essays remain the intellectual property of […]

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