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The politics of reporting poverty statistics in South Africa: anatomy of a media debate Guy Berger, IAMCR July 2008.

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Presentation on theme: "The politics of reporting poverty statistics in South Africa: anatomy of a media debate Guy Berger, IAMCR July 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 The politics of reporting poverty statistics in South Africa: anatomy of a media debate Guy Berger, IAMCR July 2008

2 Introduction 1.Summary of the issue 2.Lining up the theory 3.Description of research data 4.Analysis and conclusion

3 Summary of the issue Politicisation of poverty

4 Thabo Mbeki 2000 -

5 Pro-poor platform

6 Rival: Jacob Zuma

7 Populist

8

9 SAIRR: – 1996: 1.9 million < $1 a day – 2005: 4.2 million

10 Uniqueness of debate Most poverty coverage: – Disconnects manifestations of poverty (eg. poverty, homelessness, hunger) – Disconnects concept and policy of “poverty” from manifestations Here, these all had to be connected to contest the point.

11 Bombshell 3

12 Appropriating Western theory CDA: Repertoire, genre, style, networks of practice. Norman Fairclough

13 Building theoretical bridges Salience, media-frames, cultural frames, cause-morality-cure, headlines. Keywords, phrases, stereotypes. William Gamson Robert Entman

14 Research data 25 articles – 3 news – 11 opinion pieces (9 non-journalists) – 8 letters 13 in Business Day & Weekender 7 from SAIRR, 3 from government 0 from poor, NGOs, unions

15 Frames 1.Inadequacies of journalism: – Lack of scrutiny and value-add; – “Press had field day” (press-bashing). 2.Personalisation of the issues: – “Mbeki attacks Institute of Race Relations” – “President in war with race body over poverty”.

16 Frames 1.Politicisation:

17

18

19 Frames

20 1.Politicisation also works by: – ‘ideology’ accusations both sides – Frame expansion: labour laws as problem.

21 More frames 4.Conceptualisation of poverty: money-metric vs social wage – Relevance to winning the debate.

22 More frames 5.Statistics: – Comparing apples & oranges & diff PDLs – Proportions vs absolute figures 6.Empiricism vs scepticism vs “hunch”-ism – “shoddy”, “inadequacy of stats”, “it would be surprising if…”

23 Yet more frames 7.International legitimation around $1 a day – Problem of exchange rate issues (govt); – You use the measure yourself (SAIRR). 8.Dominant consensus vs dissident SAIRR – “Not one of SA’s poverty experts would argue…” – Miriam Altman – “We doubt such consensus exists” - SAIRR

24 Final frames 9.Agenda-switching: – “stop nitpicking” – “surely our top economists would be better occupied…” 10. Responsibility pointing: – Blame govt, population growth, economy, liberals.

25 Conclusion Analysis shows themes from frames are rhetorical, more than media frames. Debate never resolved: media played role of elite forum only.

26 Taking stock textually: SAIRR won the debate – in terms of volume & reason

27 Research qtn: media centrism BUT: political frame may be the most important – beware of CDA and Frame assumption that texts “talk”, and have influence… Because: “White” SAIRR vs black govt. In the end, the absent players (at least some) had their say: Mbeki lost his ANC post to Zuma a month later!

28 On the other hand…


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