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How the international media framed 'food riots' during the global food crises of 2007-12

Hossain, Naomi

Authors



Abstract

This paper explores the framing of ‘food riots’ in the international media during the global food crisis period of 2007–12. This is an important issue because the international media’s overly simplistic treatment of food-related protests as caused by hunger leading to anger and violence, dominates public discourse, informing both global policy discourse and quantitative policy research into food riots. This paper draws on some basic analysis of a large news database to explore the effects of how food riots were framed in the international media. It confirms the overly simplistic ‘hungry man is an angry man’ thesis held across international media discourse as a whole. But it also notes differences within the media, and argues that those differences produce different effects depending on whether articles are intended to inform, analyse or advocate. Certain voices are silenced or subdued by the international media, but food rioters in the developing world appear to be treated with more sympathy than rioters in the North might expect, or than they receive in their own national media. Overall, the effect of international media coverage of the wave of food riots during the food crisis, particularly in 2008, was to indicate a global policy problem requiring global policy action. It therefore marked a political intervention on a global scale.

Citation

Hossain, N. (2018). How the international media framed 'food riots' during the global food crises of 2007-12. Food Security, 10, 677-688. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-018-0802-7

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 20, 2018
Online Publication Date May 18, 2018
Publication Date Jun 1, 2018
Deposit Date Jun 30, 2025
Journal Food Security
Print ISSN 1876-4517
Electronic ISSN 1876-4525
Publisher Springer
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 10
Pages 677-688
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-018-0802-7