A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, January 28, 2018
(1) WHAT IS PEACE JOURNALISM?
20 January 2018
Peace journalism is when editors and reporters make choices – about what
to report, and how to report it – that create opportunities for society
at large to consider and to value non-violent responses to conflict.
If readers and audiences are furnished with such opportunities, but
still decide they prefer war to peace, there is nothing more journalism
can do about it, while remaining journalism. On the other hand, there is
no matching commitment to ensuring a fair hearing for violent
responses, if only because they seldom struggle for a place on the news
agenda.
How come? To report is to choose. ‘We just report the facts’,
journalists say, but ‘the facts’ is a category of practically infinite
size. Even in these days of media profusion, that category has to be
shrunk to fit into the news. The journalist is a ‘gatekeeper’, allowing
some aspects of reality through, to emerge, blinking, into the public
eye; and keeping the rest in the dark.
Neither is this a random process. The bits left out are always, or
usually, the same bits, or the same sorts of bits. News generally
prefers official sources to anyone from the ‘grassroots’; event to
process; and a two-sided battle for supremacy as the basic conflict
model.
These preferences, or biases, hardened into industry conventions as
journalism began to be sold as a mass-produced commodity in consumer
societies, and faced pressure to present itself as
all-things-to-all-people, capable of being marketed to potential
readers, listeners and viewers of all political views and none.
Quoting officials – a category topped by the political leader of one’s
own country – is a choice and a preference, but one with a built-in
alibi. It was not our ‘fault’ that this person became head of
government: s/he just ‘is’. ‘Indexing’, or the familiar journalistic
habit of restricting the extent of debate to differences between
government and official opposition – ‘elite discord’ – has the same
effect, of camouflaging choices as facts.
What about event and process? News that dwells on, say, the details of
death and destruction wrought by a bomb, avoids controversy. The device
has, indisputably, gone off. There are well-attested casualty figures,
from trustworthy sources such as hospitals and the police. What is
automatically more controversial is to probe why the bombers did it,
what was the process leading up to it, what were their grievances and
motivations.
As to dualism, well, when I was a reporter at the BBC, we all realised
that a successful career could be based on the following formula: ‘on
the one hand… on the other hand… in the end, only time will tell’. To
have ‘balance’, to ‘hear both sides’, is a reliable way to insulate
oneself against complaints of one-sidedness, or bias.
War Journalism and Its Antidote
There are deep-seated reasons, then, why these are the dominant
conventions in journalism, but, taken together, they mean that its
framing of public debates over conflict issues is generally on the side
of violent responses. It merits the description, ‘war journalism’.
How come? Take the dualism first. If you start to think about a conflict
as a tug-of-war between two great adversaries, then any change in their
relationship – any movement – can only take place along a single axis.
Just as, in tug-of-war, one side gaining a metre means the other side
losing a metre, so any new development, in a conflict thus conceived,
immediately begs to be assessed in a zero-sum game. Anything that is
not, unequivocally, winning, risks being reported as losing. It brings a
readymade incentive to step up efforts for victory, or escalate. People
involved in conflict ‘talk tough’ – and often ‘act tough’ – as they
play to a gallery the media have created.
Remove acts of political violence from context and you leave only
further violence as a possible response. This is why there is so little
news about peace initiatives – if no underlying causes are visible,
there is nothing to ‘fix’. Only in this form of reporting does it make
any sense to view ‘terrorism’, for example, as something on which it is
possible or sensible to wage ‘war’.
And if you wait, to report on either underlying causes or peace
initiatives, until it suits political leaders to discuss or engage with
them, you might wait a long time. Stirrings of peace almost invariably
begin at lower levels. There is, furthermore, a lever in the hands of
governments that no one else has – the ‘legitimate’ use of military
force. For all these reasons, the primacy of official sources, coupled
with the enduring national orientation of most media, is bound to skew
the representation of conflicts in favour of a pronounced receptiveness
to the advocacy of violence.
Hence, peace journalism, as a remedial strategy and an attempt to supplement the news conventions to give peace a chance.
Peace Journalism:
- Explores the backgrounds and contexts of conflict formation, presenting causes and options on every side (not just ‘both sides’);
- Gives voice to the views of all rival parties, from all levels;
- Offers creative ideas for conflict resolution, development, peacemaking and peacekeeping;
- Exposes lies, cover-up attempts and culprits on all sides, and reveals excesses committed by, and suffering inflicted on, peoples of all parties;
- Pays attention to peace stories and post-war developments.
Reality and Representation
Peace journalism is more realistic, in the sense of fidelity to a
reality that already exists, independently of our knowledge or
representation of it. To report violence without background or context
is to misrepresent it, since any conflict is, at root, a relationship,
of parties setting and pursuing incompatible goals. To omit any
discussion of them is a distortion.
At the same time, it acknowledges that there is no one correct version
of this reality that everyone will agree upon. We understand the world
around us by taking messages and images – including those served up by
the news – and slotting them into codes we develop through our lives and
carry in our heads. Meaning is not created solely at the point of
production, or encoding; no act of representation is complete until it
has been received, or decoded. Decoding is something we often do
automatically, since so much of what we read, hear and see is familiar.
This is what propaganda relies on – establish Saddam Hussein as a ‘bad
man’, or ‘weapons of mass destruction’ as a ‘threat’, and it forms a
prism, through which all the reality, both subsequent and previous,
tends to be viewed.
Journalism is often easy prey for such efforts because it does not
generally encourage us to reflect on the choices it is making, for
reasons discussed above. The famous US ‘anchor-man’, Walter Cronkite,
signed off CBS Evening News every night with the catchphrase, “that’s
the way it is”. How it came to be that way would be an interesting
conversation, but it is not one in which news is generally keen to
engage.
Communications students will recognise the last few paragraphs as a
potted version of reception theory. In writing this introduction, I’ve
resisted academic sources, because, yes folks, the clichés are true,
media scholars often do dress in black (which we won’t hold against
them) and chew polysyllables for breakfast (which we might). However
it’s worth quoting one famous aphorism coined by a clever and original
researcher, Gaye Tuchman: “the acceptance of representational
conventions as facticity makes reality vulnerable to manipulation”.
So peace journalism is in favour of truth, as any must be. Of course
reporters should report, as truthfully as they can, the facts they
encounter; only ask, as well, how they have come to meet these
particular facts, and how the facts have come to meet them. If it’s
always the same facts, or the same sorts of facts, adopt a policy of
seeking out important stories, and important bits of stories, which
would otherwise slip out of the news, and devise ways to put them back
in. And try to let the rest of us in on the process. Peace journalism is
that which abounds in cues and clues to prompt and equip us to
‘negotiate’ our own readings, to open up multiple meanings, to inspect
propaganda and other self-serving representations on the outside.
Can journalists actually do this, and do they? Latterly, researchers
have set out to gauge the amount of peace journalism that is going on.
There is probably no one piece of reporting that exhibits all five of
the characteristics listed above, whilst also avoiding demonizing
language, labeling and so forth. But distinctions do exist, and they
have been measured. Reporting in The Philippines, especially by the
country’s main newspaper, the Philippine Daily Inquirer, is
interesting in providing an effective counter to attempts by the
country’s government to import the ‘war on terrorism’ ideology and apply
it to a long-running insurgency. The paper I used to work for, the Independent of London, does a lot of peace journalism.
Then of course there are proliferating independent media, now building,
through web-based platforms, on traditions long nurtured by alternative
newspapers and community radio stations. There is some peace journalism,
so there could be more.


