wars
  • Lucia Palmioli 7 January 2025
    The lack of journalistic coverage during conflicts like the one in Rwanda is not just oversight; it is a form of media framing. Media framing is the act of selecting and organizing information to make sense of events, deciding what to highlight or omit. This inevitable practice in journalism shapes public perception and politics. Some conflicts receive extensive coverage, while others remain in the shadows.
  • Emanuela Scridel 23 July 2010
    Over the last decade, conflicts arisen from ethnic, religious, political and more purely "economic" reasons - for the possession of natural resources and territories - have shown an escalation of global dimension. Further, recent history demonstrates that armed conflicts originated in a specific part of the world do not remain confined to it, but tend to affect the rest of the world and tend to spread through ways typical of the “globalization of the economy".
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