Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

Foreign correspondents and fixers (Colleen Murrell PhD))

| Sin comentarios

Submitted in total fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy October 2011 School of Culture and Communication The Faculty of Arts The University of Melbourne

ABSTRACT This thesis considers the relationship between television foreign correspondents and their locally-hired ‘fixers’ in order to ascertain the centrality and significance of this relationship in facilitating international news production. The design of this research project, with its emphasis on news production practice, was guided by scholars in the sociology of news tradition, such as Jeremy Tunstall, Michael Schudson, Stephen Reese, Pamela Shoemaker and Simon Cottle.

The main research question asks to what extent, and how, is the relationship between the correspondent and the fixer important to newsgathering? Drawing on the theories of Pierre Bourdieu concerning the journalistic field and the acquisition of cultural capital, this research demonstrates how fixers possess vital stores of capital which foreign correspondents borrow in order to be successful in the field.

This thesis explores in depth how the players work in tandem to overcome the difficulties posed by multi-skilling, parachuting, instant live reporting, and the 24-hour news cycle. Current newsgathering practice in Iraq is investigated as a case study, which reveals the difficulties of reporting from this dateline and reflects on how the level of danger has changed the nature of the correspondent-fixer relationship.

Within this relationship, where a correspondent has the ultimate power to hire and fire, a fixer nonetheless brings significant influence to bear on story generation and story coverage. But does this influence bring into the Western news agenda stories that genuinely reflect localised, indigenous viewpoints? Or, in this globalised world, are fixers simply ‘People Like Us’ (PLU), who have absorbed Western news values and will reinforce them through the stories that they propose?

In other words, are correspondents likely to gain an insight into localised communities and their problems that they might not otherwise have understood, or will they have their own views and presumptions reflected back at them? This thesis examines what the use of fixers reveals about the political economy of news and the changing context of international news production. It asks whether the growing importance of fixers in newsgathering reflects a move by media companies to eventually outsource international newsgathering to local employees. This thesis employs a qualitative methodological approach involving semi-structured interviews with foreign correspondents and fixers to explore their modus operandi and to investigate the building of overseas news teams.

…MORE

Fixers: The unsung heroes of journalism | Feature | The Listening Post (June 17, 2018

Fixers in Wartime – The invisible Reporters (March 22, 2024)

 

Related

Fixer Roles in Journalism: Ultimate Guide

Understanding the role of a fixer (IJNET)

Fixers: The people at the core of international journalism

I Was a Fixer. Here’s Why Journalism Needs to Rethink the Role (Nieman)

The Fixers (Lindsay Palmer)

«Fixing» the Journalist-Fixer Relationship: A Critical Look Towards Developing Best Practices in Global Reporting

 

Deja una respuesta

Los campos requeridos estan marcados con *.


Este sitio usa Akismet para reducir el spam. Aprende cómo se procesan los datos de tus comentarios.