Modern Communications and Foreign Policy


Book Description




Modern Communications and Foreign Policy. Report No. 5 Together with Part X of the Hearings on Winning the Cold War: the U.S. Ideological Offensive, by the Subcommittee on International Organizations and Movements of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives ... June 13, 1967. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and Ordered to be Printed


Book Description




Modern Communications and Foreign Policy


Book Description

Reviews effectiveness of U.S. and private communications efforts to achieve foreign policy goals and combat spread of communism. Focuses on applications of multi-media communication efforts and technology in developing countries.













Communicating National Image through Development and Diplomacy


Book Description

This edited collection draws upon interdisciplinary research to explore new dimensions in the politics of image and aid. While development communication and public diplomacy are established research fields, there is little scholarship that seeks to understand how the two areas relate to one another. However, international development doctrine in the US, UK and elsewhere increasingly suggests that they are integrated–or at the very least should be–at the level of national strategy. This timely volume considers a variety of cases in diverse regions, drawing upon a combination of theoretical and conceptual lenses that combine a focus on both aid and image. The result is a text that seeks to establish a new body of knowledge on how contemporary debates into public diplomacy, soft power and the national image are fundamentally changing not just the communication of aid, but its wider strategies, modalities and practices.




Media Diplomacy


Book Description

First Published in 1986. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.




Global Communications, International Affairs and the Media Since 1945


Book Description

In Global Communications, International Affairs and the Media since 1945 , Philip M. Taylor traces the increased involvement of the media in issues of peace and especially war from the nineteenth century to the present day. He analyzes the nature, role and impact of communications within the international arena since 1945 and how communications interacts with foreign policy in practice rather than in theory. Using studies which include the Gul War and Vietnam, Taylor details the contemporary problems reporting while at the same time providing a comprehensive historical context.