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Introduction:
All significant conflicts get played out, in part, in the media, says journalist Jannie Botes.
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This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Development of Conflict Through the Media
Jannie Botes
Assistant Professor, Program on Negotiations and Conflict Management, University of Baltimore
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Getting back to
your point about journalism and conflict and the relationship, I think another
part of the relationship is that every conflict that is all-important in a
community or internationally are played out in the media. The media becomes the
arena and I hate the word but for lack of a better word, battlefield, in which
parties play out conflicts. The decisions might be made by Track I or
official decision makers in government and elsewhere, but everyone still tries
to upward shift or a little power positioning through the media especially
because they want public opinion on their side. So one of the important parts
about the relationship between journalism and conflict is the fact that every
conflict gets played out in the media in some way shape or form
Q: Which means that the media actually creates the reality that it's
reporting in some sense, it's not just the media reporting on reality, it's
sort of a cyclical relationship?
A: Well, that gets back to Koppel's point about either you frame it or we
frame it. So, as I've mentioned the reason that conflict is played out in the
media is that the parties want to reach the public opinion through the avenues
that the media offer them.
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