Post on 03-Jan-2016
MEDIA PRACTICE IN GHANA AND EFFORTS TOWARDS
PEACEFUL AND NON-VIOLENT ELECTIONS IN 2008
What is Conflict?
• Normal
• Inevitable
• Necessary… and
• Can, therefore, either build or destroy relationships
What are the Functions of Conflict?
• A signal indicating the need to create or modify rules, norms, laws and institutions
• Tells us how important relationships are
• Can create coalitions • Enhance group cohesion through
issue and belief clarification
Having said this, how do we define conflict?
Conflict is the energy that builds up when individuals or groups of people pursue incompatible goals in their drive to meet their needs and interests
The media shape what we see and hear about conflict.
The perspectives of those who run the media shape stories that are covered.
Media owners have economic interests; they want to sell their stories andprograms to a public who will buy their newspapers or watch their programs.
“If it bleeds,it leads.” That means violent conflict will be headline news, not news of cross-cultural dialogue and understanding. The media mostly covers conflict, notpeacebuilding.
This tendency to cover conflict andviolence distorts reality and leads many people to think that conflict is pervasive and peace is abnormal.
MEDIA FOCUS NO MEDIA FOCUS
Immediacy Specific actions and events
Long-term processes and policies (as in ongoing peace processes, dialogue, or mediation)
Drama Violence, crisis or conflict; Extremist behaviours; Outrageous acts
Calm, controlled, moderate people getting along with each other (e.g. participating in dialogue)
Simplicity Clear cut opinions, images, major personalities, two-sided conflicts
Complex opinions or explanations, institutions, root causes, multi-sided conflicts
Ethnocentrism Our beliefs, myths and symbols; Our sufferingThe brutality of some ‘Other’
Their beliefs, myths, symbols; Their suffering;Our brutality to ‘Them’
INTER-RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MEDIA
PRACTICE AND CONFLICT
1. MEDIA AS INFORMATION PROVIDER AND INTERPRETER
• The media provide people important information about their environment (political, cultural and social issues)
• People make decisions and judgement about other groups based on the media (choosing a government in an elections)
• Media interpret events beyond our physical realm and help us make sense of them
• Media plays a more prominent role as a result of new technologies- ICT
• Cultural context of Ghanaian society where rumour mongering is integral can exacerbate conflict- e.g. Konkomba-Nanumba Conflict
2. Media as Watchdog
• Media acts as a third party ‘watchdog’ and is an intermediary with the public on issues and problems
• Media brings our systemic issues and problems that are often hidden open to the public. (e.g. Chronicle Headline “War drums beating in the North” Konkomba-Nanumba war. The challenge is how such conflicts are reported
3. Media as Gatekeeper• Media act as gatekeepers, setting the agenda,
filtering issues and maintaining balance• In 2006, a cartoonist in Denmark created
international conflict with his message about Islam. The global tensions prompted extensive analysis on how and when media professionals should act as a gatekeeper to prevent certain expressions that could be deemed humiliating or offensive to some groups.
4. Media as Policy maker
• The media has influence on policy makers while it is also a tool for policy makers to put across their message (e.g. Bawku conflict)
5. Media as Diplomat
• Sometimes the media is used to cover diplomatic initiatives and send messages back and forth between sides of a conflict.
• The media can build bridges among enemies and build confidence needed to open negotiations.
6. Media as Peace Builder
• Media events can be used at the beginning of negotiations to build confidence, facilitate negotiations or break diplomatic deadlocks to create a climate conducive to negotiation.
• Media events such as press releases, rock concerts, or radio programs can celebrate peace agreements and negotiations. The media events may help to promote and
• mobilize public support for agreements.
7. The Media as Bridge Builder
• The media can promote positive relationships between groups, particularly in conflicts over national, ethnic, religious identity.
• The media can lessen polarization between groups
• MEDIA PRACTICE AND CONFLICT ANALYSIS
CONFLICT ANALYSES
WHAT IS CONFLICT ANALYSES?
Conflict analysis is a practical process of examining and understanding the reality of a conflict from a variety of
perspectives.
Why do you need to analyse conflicts?
• To understand the background and history of the situation as well as current events;
• To identify all the relevant groups involved, not just the main or obvious ones;
• To understand the perspectives of all these groups and to know more about how they relate to each other;
• To identify factors and trends that underpin conflicts; power, attitudes, behaviours, systems and structures, levels of involvement, root causes and triggers, needs, interests and positions.
• To lean from failures as well as successes.
• To inform our programs, and determine how we should respond to the conflict with our programs;
• To determine who is involved in the conflict;
• To figure out what motivates people to use violence or continue conflict (e.g. economic motivations, desire for power, redressing ethnic grievances);
• To identify the conflict “fault lines” (the issues in the conflict);
• To determine how the conflict is unfolding
• To uncover the origin of the conflict
• Understand the secondary/shadow parties, issues and currents
• Improve understanding of relationships and entry points of response
• Identify the expectations of stakeholders
• Assess the conflict cost
• Help in Reconciliation
• Determine the right approach to intervention
• Until we understand the causes of conflicts, who is involved, the issues and dynamics of the conflict, our peacebuilding programming / peacekeeping operation will be ineffective.
• Conflict analysis supplies a detailed picture of what is happening and helps us determine what we might do to create more peaceful and just societies.
Conflict analysis is not a one-time exercise; it must be an
on-going process, as the situation is developing, so that you can adapt your actions to changing factors, dynamics
and circumstances.
some conflict analyses tools
• Stages of conflict • The 3Ps• Timelines • Conflict mapping • ABC (Attitude, Behaviour, Context) triangle • Onion (or the doughnut) • Conflict tree • Pillars • Pyramid • The Grid
•Too much alcohol
•Overwork
•Illness
•Need glasses
•Stress
•I have a headache
•Relax
•Sleep
•Play sports
•Change jobs
•Organise a basketball game for Saturday afternoon
Towards possiblesolutions
Commit throughSpecific actions
From problem tocauses
•The Four Quadrant Tool
Types of Conflict
Centre for Conflict Resolution, Cape Town, South Africa, 1999Centre for Conflict Resolution, Cape Town, South Africa, 1999
Circle of Conflict
Copyright © 1997 CDR Associates, Boulder, Co.
Threshold of Armed ConflictThe Cycle of ConflictThe Cycle of ConflictThe Cycle of ConflictThe Cycle of Conflict
THE CYCLE OF CONFLICT
Threshold of Sustainable Peace
ConflictConflict
Sustainable PeaceSustainable Peace
Start of Armed Conflict
Start of Armed Conflict
Formal Cessation of Armed Conflict
Threshold of Armed Conflict
ArmedConflictArmed
Conflict
EscalationEscalationPost-
CeasefirePost-
CeasefireThreshold of
Sustainable Peace
PeacePeace
Time
THE CYCLE OF CONFLICT
LIFE CYCLE OF A CONFLICT
Peacemaking
Crisis diplomacy
Preventive diplomacy
Routine diplomacy
War
Crisis
Un-stable peace
Stable peace
Durable peace
Peace enforcement
Peacekeeping
Post-conflict peacebuilding
ceasefire
confrontation
De-escalation
Escalation
Settlement
Simmering tensions
reconciliation