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Session slides used in MAC373 Media Ethics and Contexts session on the Middle East
Reporting war and the media of the Middle East
Reporting war and the media of the Middle East
Rob Jewitt
A Diagrammatic Representation of the U.S. Military Industrial Complex.
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A mapping of the coverage by Western mainstream media outlets & by alternative citizen reporters on the ground of the Israeli war on Gaza (Operation "Protective Edge", July 2014), focusing primarily on the coverage of the Shejaiya shelling on Sunday July 20, 2014.
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Mac301 Gw2 And Al Jazeera 2009 10 Sem1
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the World Government for the World of Tomorrow Science, Art, and Practice of War and Peace MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) PhilosophyWorld Peace and World Government Post-Information Age > Post-Nuclear Epoch > Post-Human Era Rise and Dominance of Peace-Making Intelligent Machinery Homo Sapiens or Homo Barbarus: “all men are always at war with on another”
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Recommended
Session slides used in MAC373 Media Ethics and Contexts session on the Middle East
Reporting war and the media of the Middle East
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Rob Jewitt
A Diagrammatic Representation of the U.S. Military Industrial Complex.
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elegantbrain
A mapping of the coverage by Western mainstream media outlets & by alternative citizen reporters on the ground of the Israeli war on Gaza (Operation "Protective Edge", July 2014), focusing primarily on the coverage of the Shejaiya shelling on Sunday July 20, 2014.
Narrating war in 140 characters: “Protective Edge” as covered by Western main...
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Graham, Stephen. "In a moment: on glocal mobilities and the terrorised city."...
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This presentation is first in the series of lectures for a programme on International Humanitarian Law in the curriculum of law degree.However ,it will also be useful to the students of Law of Armed Conflict in military, para- military forces and other security elements.
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This is another type of war, new in its intensity, ancient in its origin—war by guerrillas, subversives, insurgents, assassins, war by ambush instead of by combat; by infiltration, instead of aggression, seeking victory by eroding and exhausting the enemy instead of engaging him. It preys on economic unrest and ethnic conflicts. It requires in those situations where we must counter it, and these are the kinds of challenges that will be before us in the next decade if freedom is to be saved, a whole new kind of strategy, a wholly different kind of force, and therefore a new and wholly different kind of military training
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“ Naturally the common people don\'t want war: Neither in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. ... Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country”.
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The nature of the war seen from his social and political implications was perhaps for the first time described by the general Carl von Clausewitz in the pages of “On War”. In terms of popularity, it seems undeniable that Clausewitz’s work has fueled hundreds of comments and criticisms that among all the XIX and XX century have shelled and analyzed his thought. “Not simply the greatest book On War but the one truly great book on that subject yet written” says Bernard Brody about “On War” (Brody: 1973, v.25:2).
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This presentation is first in the series of lectures for a programme on International Humanitarian Law in the curriculum of law degree.However ,it will also be useful to the students of Law of Armed Conflict in military, para- military forces and other security elements.
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This is another type of war, new in its intensity, ancient in its origin—war by guerrillas, subversives, insurgents, assassins, war by ambush instead of by combat; by infiltration, instead of aggression, seeking victory by eroding and exhausting the enemy instead of engaging him. It preys on economic unrest and ethnic conflicts. It requires in those situations where we must counter it, and these are the kinds of challenges that will be before us in the next decade if freedom is to be saved, a whole new kind of strategy, a wholly different kind of force, and therefore a new and wholly different kind of military training
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Exeter University 1 October 2014
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“ Naturally the common people don\'t want war: Neither in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. ... Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country”.
Truth or Prapaganda
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Abhishek Shah
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andeedalal
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The writer sets out to study excerpted samples of the war speeches made across the world between the World War eras and the present with a view to finding out the linguistic choices favoured by war leaders over time to drum up support for wars. It is argued here that there may be something unique in the linguistic choices made in war speeches which convince people to support the prosecution of wars despite the wanton destruction that follows them. Framed on a descriptive research design, with stylistics as the theoretical framework, the study examines the excerpts chosen by deliberate sampling so as to identify and analyze the features they share. The analysis reveals that the speeches share many linguistic features in common, all of which may be responsible for the control of the minds and actions of the people.
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Similar to Information War
95 Nordicom Review 30 (2009) 1, pp. 95-112 New War Journalism Trends and Challenges Stig A. NohrStedt Abstract How has war journalism changed since the end of the Cold War? After the fall of the Ber- lin Wall in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, there was talk of a new world order. The Balkan Wars of the 1990s gave rise to the concept of “new wars”. The 1990-91 Gulf War was the commercial breakthrough for the around-the-clock news chan- nel CNN, and the war in Afghanistan in 2001 for its competitor al-Jazeera. The 2003 Iraq war saw Internet’s great breakthrough in war journalism. A new world order, new wars, and new media – what impact is all this having on war journalism? This article outlines some important trends based on recent media research and discusses the new challenges as well as the consequences they entail for the conditions of war journalism, its professional reflexivity and democratic role. Keywords: new media war; propaganda and war journalism; framing of war news; visual war reporting; media reflexivity. Introduction How has war journalism changed since the end of the Cold War? After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, there was talk of a new world order holding the promise of international justice and peace. However, the Balkan Wars of the 1990s gave rise to the concept of “new wars” that in the wake of the terror attacks of 9/11 have acquired an iconicity rivalling that of fiction films. The 1990-1991 Gulf War was the commercial breakthrough for the around-the-clock news channel CNN, and the war in Afghanistan in 2001 for its competitor al-Jazeera. The 2003 Iraq war saw Internet’s great breakthrough in war journalism with the, at first anonymous, icon Salam Pax belonging to the first generation of war bloggers. A new world order (that did not turn out as hoped in 1989), new wars, and new media – what impact is all this having on war journalism? Can we see signs of a new war journalism, perhaps even the development of a peace journalism? War Journalism as Mediated Banal Nationalism Wars are not only fought by military means. Alongside the fighting on the ground, at sea, and in the air, a media war is fought over public opinion and the willingness to fight of populations and troops (Taylor 1997:119; cf. Thussu & Freedman 2003:7). The media become a battleground, and journalists are drawn into the conflict, either voluntarily 96 or under orders, or even unawares. Modern wars cannot be fought without public sup- port, and great efforts are made to get the public to accept, and preferably support their own side’s actions in the conflict. Media and journalists have gained an increasingly central position due to developments in media technology such as satellite TV channels broadcasting 24/7 news so rapidly that it is possible to report live from a combat zone. The visual media’s unique power of influence increases the propag.
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The views expressed in this PDF lecture do not necessarily represent the view of Henley Putnam University and are solely the author's view.
Catino pdf from ancient to modern war: An Overview of Fourth Generation Warfare
Catino pdf from ancient to modern war: An Overview of Fourth Generation Warfare
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MODERN WARFARE 2 MODERN WARFARE Modern Warfare Name Institution Date The author hereby grants the American Public University System the right to display these contents for educational purposes. The author assumes total responsibility for meeting the requirements set by United States copyright law for the inclusion of any materials that are not the author’s creation or in the public domain. © Copyright 2017 by Christina Yap-Mitchell All rights reserved. DEDICATION xxx Abstract War has been part of the human race for centuries, and its evolution continues to pose a significant risk to the survival of soldiers. The potential consequences of modern warfare in military activities have contributed to the decline of the United States military population since the battlefield continues to expand as new conflicts arise. The military technological advances of the United States reveal opportunities for mitigating adverse effects associated with combat while informing the development of optimal strategies for survival through the use of proxies and remote-controlled weaponry. In past two decades, there have been numerous advancements on the battlefield in the form of arms, transportation, and air power which have direct impacts for deployed personnel in various combat scenarios such as land warfare, naval warfare, aerial warfare, space warfare, and information warfare. The primary objective of this paper is to perform an investigation of the degree of influence of technology on the modern warfare while striving to uncover its impact in the quest to significantly reduce the number of deaths of American troops involved in various war scenarios. The paper will seek to provide evidence on the capabilities of technology in modern warfare in the reduction of the number of deaths of American soldiers who have been tasked with the responsibility of providing security, protecting populations, establishing stability, and eliminating terrorist threats in various battlefields. Keywords:Modern Warfare, Technological Advancements, Land Warfare, Naval Warfare, i MODERN WARFARE iv MODERN WARFARE Aerial Warfare, and Information Warfar TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATIONiii Abstractiv Introduction1 Problem1 Purpose1 Research Questions1 Significance of the Study1 Literature Review3 Conclusion9 References10 Modern WarfareIntroduction War can be traced to the dawn of civilization from the Stone Age, to the Middle Age, and to the Modern Age (Van Creveld, 2010). Warfare has always been conducted through careful resource ...
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Little has been published on the ethical and legal basis of air attacks on non-combatants during the First World War. Existing works have focused mainly on the injustice of the German Zeppelin and Gotha raids on British towns. They present British air campaigns on German towns and the formation of the Royal Air Force as a reasoned self-defensive response. This article breaks new ground as it attempts to paint a richer picture by explaining the influence of retributive passions – vengeance – on British thinking about how best to respond to the villainy of German air raids. By using unpublished primary sources to uncover the moral and legal rationale used by British decision-makers, it shows that they (as their German counterparts had) exploited ambiguities or "loopholes" in the ethical and legal prohibitions on the bombardment of non-combatants and explained away their own air attacks on civilian towns and villages as legitimate acts of reprisal. It ends by demonstrating that, far from feeling grave concerns about the inhumanity of targeting civilians and their environs, the most influential air power thinkers after the war were relatively uninterested in moral concepts of proportionality and discrimination. They saw air power's ability to punish the strong and culpable by attacking the weak and vulnerable as a way of making wars shorter and therefore less expensive.
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THE TECHONOLOGY AND SCIENCE OF WAR 8 Research Paper: The technology and Science of War Princess K. Nyarko Running head: THE TECHONOLOGY AND SCIENCE OF WAR 1 Hawaii Pacific University Abstract In search of high technology, biological advancement had a closer and closer relationship with the strategies of power in the twentieth century. In 1970, a high technological breakthrough reinforced the war relation of science and completely overpassed the traditional biology manipulation of genetically recombined pathogenic agents. The biotechnology revolution began with a new approach to the military and political science. From this point on a scene came a new standard of war as well as new challenges to international health and new concepts for life science. This paper is meant to present the mechanism of connection between science and power and to understand how the military field is investing in biotechnological development to produce technologies and bioweapons that can be used in war. Introduction With respect to science and technology, the main outcome of WWI was the development of weapons, which was never known before in the result of unprecedented rationalization of production. Anyhow the historical research has focused on more concrete outcomes such as inventions and development tanks, submarines, planes, cameras and lenses, wireless radio transmission, or on the development of scientist’s political consciousness and the role of science in propagandas (Lehmann & Morselli, 2016). For example, the famous 1914 manifesto of German scientists “A die Kulturwelt”, signed by 93 dominant intellectuals of that time, was completely ignored during the inventions in WWII like short-range rockets, radar technologies, and atomic bombs compared to this, WWI did not result in exceptional inventions like these. Major research issues Industrial mass production and the logistical supply was the key to win any war. Here at the production level, the significant impacts of science in war can be researched. From a general perspective, Germany was the most advanced country before WWI scientifically; their scientists had developed an organized industry of their scientific output. Which eventually is very beneficial in the times of war. Due to war, the shared European intellectual’s community broke into pieces. The German science became isolated as well as with Russia where due to the outbreak of war, communication and collaboration with colleagues from the belligerent nation was broken until the end of civil war in 1920; the allies were able to maintain their scientific collaboration, and they expanded it to make institutions. The priority after the WWI was to rebuild the network of international scientific collaboration, which was done by the foundation of institutes like the International Research Council and the Union Academies International in 1919, and which followed a long-term policy of exclusion of Germany (Lehmann & Morselli, 2016). This .
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The consequences of War in Africa nd the rest of the world is apparently creating more poor people and less productivity to safe life on our planet, Earth. Read this article of War and Poverty to have a better understanding of the life of others affected.
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The scientific and technical advances in non-lethal weapons hold a significant potential for minimising casualties in warfare. Such weapons are gaining operational possibilities as a consequence of technological advances and the nature of conflict situations encountered by military forces in the 21st century. Casualty aversion can be identified to be the driving factor explaining the shift in defense technology to non-lethal weapons. Although non-lethal weapons remain an underutilised asset as shown in the slow rate at which the defence forces of states embrace and invest in them, the need to avert military and civilian casualties justifies why non-lethal technology has emerged in the practice of warfare.
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WAR SEEMS TO BENEFIT EVERYONE (EXCEPT THE ONES WHO DIE FIGHTING IN IT) – PATRIOTS, POLITICIANS, ARMS INDUSTRY, PROFITEERS. CAN THERE BE AN ECONOMIC JUSTIFICATION OF A WAR? CAN, AND SHOULD, ECONOMIC DECISIONS BE MADE IN MORAL VACUUM?
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This PPT provides an in-depth analysis of the international arms trade, covering its history, regulations, and the challenges associated with controlling the flow of weapons
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The end of the Cold War witnessed the growth and spread of legally established private military contractors (PMCs) playing largely undefined roles in wars, international security and post-conflict reconstruction. The operations of PMCs in Iraq and Afghanistan in the 21st century have been marked by gross human rights abuses and poor treatment and torture of prisoners of war (POWs). Indeed, PMCs are likely to step outside their contractual obligations and commit criminal acts. This article adds to the literature on the subject by arguing that the elusiveness of PMCs’ individual or corporate responsibility for war crimes presents one of the greatest challenges for international humanitarian law (IHL). This presents a dilemma for IHL, which seeks to address individual offences. The situation becomes even more complicated when non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and multinational corporations (MNCs) are involved in the use of PMCs.
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