Syria, Press Framing, and the Responsibility to Protect

By E. Donald Briggs, Walter C. Soderlund, and Tom Pierre Najem
Categories: Political Science, Art & Performance Studies, Film Studies, Public & Social Policy, Social Sciences, Popular Culture, Communication & Media Studies
Series: Studies in International Governance
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Paperback : 9781771123075, 240 pages, July 2017
Ebook (PDF) : 9781771123082, 240 pages, July 2017
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781771123099, 240 pages, July 2017

Table of contents

List of Maps and Tables

Acknowledgments

The Authors

Maps –The Middle East

Introduction

Chapter 1 – Understanding Syria’s Civil War

Chapter 2 – Evolving Norms of International Involvement in Domestic Conflicts: The Responsibility to Protect

Chapter 3 – The Role of the Press in the Framing of Conflict

Chapter 4 – Conflict Framing in 2011

Chapter 5 – Conflict Framing in 2012

Chapter 6 – Conflict Framing – January 1 through August 21, 2013

Chapter 7 – The August 2013 Chemical Weapons Attack: Framing of a Possible Military Response Conclusion

Notes

References

Index

Description

The Syrian Civil War has created the worst humanitarian disaster since the end of World War II, sending shock waves through Syria, its neighbours, and the European Union. Calls for the international community to intervene in the conflict, in compliance with the UN-sanctioned Responsibility to Protect (R2P), occurred from the outset and became even more pronounced following President Assad's use of chemical weapons against civilians in August 2013. Despite that egregious breach of international convention, no humanitarian intervention was forthcoming, leaving critics to argue that UN inertia early in the conflict contributed to the current crisis

Syria, Press Framing, and The Responsibility to Protect examines the role of the media in framing the Syrian conflict, their role in promoting or, on the contrary, discouraging a robust international intervention. The media sources examined are all considered influential with respect to the shaping of elite views, either directly on political leaders or indirectly through their influence on public opinion. The volume provides a review of the arguments concerning appropriate international responses to events in Syria and how they were framed in leading newspapers in the United States, Great Britain, and Canada during the crucial early years of the conflict; considers how such media counsel affected the domestic contexts in which American and British decisions were made not to launch forceful interventions following Assad's use of sarin gas in 2013; and offers reasoned speculation on the relevance of R2P in future humanitarian crises in light of the failure to protect Syrian civilians.