TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond “Emergencies?" Reporting on Humanitarian Issues Around the World
AU - Wright, Kate
AU - Madrid-Morales, Dani
AU - Barrie, Christopher
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - How do journalists around the world report on humanitarian issues? Two decades after Calhoun first wrote about the “emergency imaginary”, it is still seen as a “master frame”, dominating narratives about humanitarian action in news and aid work alike. But no one has previously tested the extent to which the emergency imaginary dominates journalism about humanitarian issues within a largescale, systematic study. Using an innovative combination of manual and computational approaches, we analyse a global corpus of over a million media texts, disseminated between 2010–2020. This specially constructed dataset included 582 sources of broadcast, print and online media in 92 countries. We found that the emergency imaginary did dominate reporting in most Anglophone countries. But it did not seem to dominate the coverage of humanitarian issues world-wide. Instead, journalism elsewhere tended to use hybrid interpretative frames: blending aspects of the emergency imaginary with other kinds of discourse. However, in most of the countries we analysed, online journalism had a closer relationship to the emergency imaginary than non-digital content. Based on an analysis of document similarity, we suggest that this may be influenced by their dependence on copy from three wire agencies, Associated Press, Agence France Presse, and Thomson Reuters.
AB - How do journalists around the world report on humanitarian issues? Two decades after Calhoun first wrote about the “emergency imaginary”, it is still seen as a “master frame”, dominating narratives about humanitarian action in news and aid work alike. But no one has previously tested the extent to which the emergency imaginary dominates journalism about humanitarian issues within a largescale, systematic study. Using an innovative combination of manual and computational approaches, we analyse a global corpus of over a million media texts, disseminated between 2010–2020. This specially constructed dataset included 582 sources of broadcast, print and online media in 92 countries. We found that the emergency imaginary did dominate reporting in most Anglophone countries. But it did not seem to dominate the coverage of humanitarian issues world-wide. Instead, journalism elsewhere tended to use hybrid interpretative frames: blending aspects of the emergency imaginary with other kinds of discourse. However, in most of the countries we analysed, online journalism had a closer relationship to the emergency imaginary than non-digital content. Based on an analysis of document similarity, we suggest that this may be influenced by their dependence on copy from three wire agencies, Associated Press, Agence France Presse, and Thomson Reuters.
KW - a la carte word embedding: principal component analysis
KW - corpus analysis
KW - emergencies
KW - global
KW - Humanitarian
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U2 - 10.1080/21670811.2025.2502129
DO - 10.1080/21670811.2025.2502129
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105005603683
SN - 2167-0811
JO - Digital Journalism
JF - Digital Journalism
ER -