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The Global News Challenge
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Table of Contents

1. International Broadcasting: A Strategic Challenge 1.1 From Information Crusade to Business Challenge: Are We in an Information War? 1.2 International Broadcasting and Developing Countries: Histories and Definitions 1.3 A Strategic Challenge 2. Unlocking Developing Markets: Global Information and Communication Infrastructures as Gateways to Change 2.1 The Beginnings: Imperial Connections 2.2 The Political, Commercial and Cultural Impact of Communications Satellites 2.3 Information and Communication Infrastructures in Developing Markets 3. Strategic Environments and Media Audiences in Developing Countries: The Changing Face of Consumption of Information in Restricted Media Ecologies 3.1 Changing Audience Structures in Developing Countries 3.2 Strategic Environments: Introducing the Five Markets 3.3 Media Supply and Audiences in the Five Markets 3.4 Emerging Media Supply and Consumption Patterns in Developing Countries 4. Funding Streams and Missions of International Broadcasters Operating in Developing Markets 4.1 Introducing the Operators 4.2 Legal Frameworks and Scope of Activities 4.3 Value Proposition: Missions and Key Strategic Objectives of the Eight International Broadcasters 4.4 Market Segment and Audience Reach 4.5 Funding Streams and Cost Structures 4.6 Evaluation 5. Audience Trust and Loyalties in Developing Markets: Transformations and Adaptations for International Broadcasting Organizations 5.1 Changing Media Ecologies in Developing Countries: Cultures, Content, and Connectors 5.2 Audience Perceptions of Different Types of Broadcasters: Connecting the Global, Regional, National, Local, and the Personal 5.3 The Cultural Life of News 5.4 Audience Trust and Loyalties: Changing Norms and Implications for International Broadcasters 6. International Broadcasters and National Crises - Lessons from the Arab Spring Illustrated Through the Example of Egypt 6.1 Egypt’s Evolving Media Landscape – an Unfinished Revolution 6.2 Egypt’s Media Landscape and News Consumption before the January 25 Uprising 6.3 "The Revolution Will Be Televised" - Media Consumption during the Uprising 6.4 Media Consumption after the Uprising 6.5 Potential Opportunities for International News Broadcasting Organizations 7. Strategic Options for International Broadcasters in Developing Markets 7.1 Strategic Options for International Broadcasters 7.2 Strategic Options for International News Organizations 7.3 Strategic Outlook 8. The Global News Challenge and International Broadcasters in Developing Countries: From Surrogate Broadcasters to Platforms of Dialogue 8.1 A World in Transition: Changing International News Markets 8.2 The Changing Balance of Power and Strategic Choices of International Broadcasters 8.3 Trajectories: From Strategic Narrative to Inclusive Debate

About the Author

Anne Geniets is a post-doctoral research associate at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism and a researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute (OII) at the University of Oxford, UK.

Reviews

"This is an important and largely eloquent review of the way international news organizations project themselves and are perceived by their erstwhile audience – in Developing Countries…[T]he evolving status of news media in Developing Countries is a welcome breath of fresh air in a field dominated by the staid traditional players of the West and the opinions of Western audiences."--Robert Davison, City University of Hong Kong, Editor-in-Chief of The Electronic Journal on Information Systems in Developing Countries

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