Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

24 febrero, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
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Gender discrimination since 1979

CFR Education

This Women’s History Month, the Council on Foreign Relations is empowering educators to bring the global conversation on gender inequality into the classroom.

While progress toward equality is critical for women and girls, its impact reaches far beyond the individual. As experts have documented, gender equality comes with significant social and economic benefits.

In this newsletter, you will find: 

Happy learning,

Caroline Netchvolodoff 
Vice President, Education 
Council on Foreign Relations 

Continue leyendo →

22 febrero, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

Reporters at risk (navigating Iran’s internet blakout)

On Friday, February 27, at 1:00 p.m. ET, the Atlantic Council’s Adrienne Arsht National Security Resilience Initiative and Scowcroft Middle East Security Initiative will host a “Reporters at Risk” event on journalists’ efforts to report on the recent Iranian protests.

It would be impossible to cover the 2025-2026 protests and the Iranian government’s repressive response, which led to at least five thousand deaths, without the information distributed within and outside Iran by correspondents facing a government-initiated internet shutdown.

This event in our “Reporters at Risk” series will feature experts and journalists who covered the Iranian protests discussing how correspondents have remained resilient while facing physical, psychological, and political threats and technological challenges and why it matters for US foreign policy.

New policy: In-person attendees will be required to show photo ID upon arrival, and no on-site registration will be permitted. Guests will not be admitted later than twenty minutes after the event’s start time. Registration for this event will close at 5:00 p.m. ET the day prior. 

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Reporters at risk: How editors balance covering war with protecting journalists

Reporters at risk: In honor of Evan Gershkovich

Reporters at risk: On the frontlines in Ukraine and Gaza

Reporters at risk: Latin America and the Caribbean

Reporters at risk: Reflections on the Bosnian War, thirty years on

Reporters at risk: Supporting truth tellers in an age of rising authoritarianism

 

18 febrero, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

Does Trump really care about peace in Ukraine? Not really… (The Guardian)

Volodymyr Zelenskyy says ‘no agreement’ has been made during Ukraine-Russia peace talks taking place in Geneva. The US are brokering talks but expectations remain low – while Ukrainians continue to face Russian strikes amid subzero temperatures. Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s foreign correspondent in Kyiv, Luke Harding.

 

18 febrero, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

The tightrope of reporting in Putin’s Russia

18 February 2026

Next week marks four years since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. In that time, there’s been an intense crackdown on freedom of speech and dissent in Russia, which has led to many western media organisations leaving the country.

Today, we speak to Steve Rosenberg, the BBC’s Russia editor, on the tightrope of reporting from Moscow under Vladimir Putin.

Producer: Sam Chantarasak

Executive producer: Bridget Harney

Mix: Travis Evans

Senior news editor: China Collins

Photo: Russian President Vladimir Putin attends his annual end-of-year press conference in Moscow. Credit: Sputnik/Alexander Kazakov/Pool/Reuters.

18 febrero, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
Sin comentarios

Coverage of Conflicts (Zaza Tsotniashvili, Caucasus Int University)

Discover Academics to Follow

Academia.edu

Monography

Tbilisi, 2026

Zaza Tsotniashvili is a Professor and the Head of Media Programs at Caucasus International University. With a PhD in Social Sciences, his influence extends across the educational landscape; he is the founder of the House of Education, an expert for the National Center for Educational Quality Enhancement, and a member of the Georgian Parliament’s Scientific-Consultative Council on Education. Previously, Dr. Tsotniashvili served a four-year term as Rector of Gori University, where he spearheaded a successful educational reform. A veteran educator with three decades of experience, he has lectured at universities throughout Georgia and internationally. His areas of expertise include Coverage of Conflicts, Mass Communication, Artificial Intelligence, Information and Cyber Warfare, Media Literacy, Hybrid Learning, and Translation. ORCID iD: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7735-266X E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

The nature of conflict has undergone a radical transformation: classical warfare has been largely supplanted by civil and ethnic confrontations, while the battlefield has shifted from the physical realm to cyberspace, evolving into a global information war. In this chaotic and precarious reality, the role of the modern journalist has become critical. Their mandate extends beyond the mere transmission of facts to the comprehension of the profound underlying causes of conflict, the identification of manipulative narratives, and the awareness of their impact on media processes.

How should a modern journalist cover conflict? How can ethical standards be upheld? How is objectivity achieved? Which technologies should be employed? This textbook addresses precisely these and other vitally important questions.

The book synthesizes the author’s extensive professional experience with lecture materials previously available only in manuscript form, now enriched by modern teaching methodologies. This textbook fills a significant void in the Georgian academic landscape and is intended for both media studies students and practicing journalists. It offers readers contemporary theoretical knowledge, practical tools, and analysis based on both local and international case studies.

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