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Posts Tagged ‘media’

To sum up – poverty in the media

Friday, January 29th, 2010

It has been a fascinating week of discussion on the blog – we’ve had 20 authors grappling with the issue of how poverty is portrayed in the media, approaching it from very different angles. So what have we learnt?

The way the media portrays people on low incomes is neither positive nor reflective of the true situation. Those covered are often the tiny majority who are also criminal or antisocial – the ‘visible poor‘. Meanwhile poor people of the past are portrayed as nobly struggling, while those of the present are seen as feckless scroungers. And young people often get a particularly raw deal in the media.

There was less agreement on why this distortion occurs. Some focussed on the role of journalists, highlighting how little many journalists know about the lives of those they report on, and how they often don’t take the trouble to find out. Others blamed it not on the journalists themselves but the media as a whole, where a desire to shock and sensationalise can override all other considerations.

On the other hand, perhaps charities have to shoulder some of the blame for being overly hostile towards those journalists who are genuinely interested. And politicians and their language have a powerful influence, both in promoting negative stereotypes, and reacting to them. Indeed, it could be argued that government have thwarted their own ambitions for tackling poverty by turning the public against poor people.

So finally, what do we do about it? There’s perhaps a role for better understanding between journalists and charities, ensuring they work together rather than against each other. Perhaps ignoring the mainstream media and producing your own content or starting conversations in communities is the way forward. And JRF’s excellent guide to reporting poverty is being taken into journalism schools and promoted to students, hopefully influencing the next generation of reporters.

However, I can’t help feeling there is more we could do. Is there room to seriously engage with politicians on this issue, pointing out that stigmatising poor people is a direct barrier to tackling poverty? Are there ways we could engage the media better with people on low incomes? An idea that hasn’t been mentioned this week, but that I’ve heard before, is of a citizens’ panel that holds to account media outlets offering negative portrayals.

This discussion certainly isn’t over, and perhaps over the next few weeks we can keep it going, on this blog or elsewhere. In the meantime we can challenge negative portrayals wherever we see them and perhaps come up with some more concrete proposals for harnessing the power of the media to better represent and promote the interests of people on low incomes.

Reality Bites – TV’s Poverty Game Shows

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Coincidentally, while we have been debating representation of poverty in the media on the blog this week, staff from a TV production company turned up unannounced at our building in Canning Town yesterday seeking “poor people” for a new series of a reality TV programme. Whilst people are waiting to see advisers about their debts and benefits, or picking up youngsters from after-school clubs, researchers handed round flyers asking if people were “struggling to make ends meet” – and inviting them to participate in a reality TV show. It’s not the first time we have been approached to put people up for this type of “Poverty Game Show”.

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“We cannot be this rich and see people that poor”

Friday, January 29th, 2010

In 2004 Gordon Brown described how Michael Buerk’s report from Ethiopia on the famine 20 years earlier had spurred the country into action, with people feeling that “we cannot be this rich and see people that poor“. Gordon Brown, then chancellor, told the media that world poverty was the most important issue of our generation and called on the media to help fight global poverty. In doing so he warned that mass amounts of awareness would not guarantee effectiveness, that the first media drive to tackle poverty in Africa in the 80’s had a huge effect on the UK, but the second time around in the 90’s it was less successful in practical terms “Having shocked people in the 1980s, it is harder to re-shock them and re-shock them again” he said

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An alternative to mainstream media – conversations in communities

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Liam Purcell works for Church Action on Poverty, whose annual Poverty and Homeless Action week starts on Saturday.

It’s interesting that the Community Links blog is focusing on poverty in the media this week. Right now, we at Church Action on Poverty are in the middle of preparing for our biggest annual effort to raise the public profile of poverty issues. Each year, we work together with our partners Housing Justice and Scottish Churches Housing Action to run Poverty & Homelessness Action Week.

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The ‘enterprise myth’ lays the blame for poverty on the poor

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Mike Chitty is a trainer, adviser, consultant and writer on the themes of enterprise, entrepreneurship, leadership and management

“We can help turn your dream into a reality* ”
*subject to eligibility

So says an enterprise marketing campaign aimed at some of the poorest communities in Leeds.  But it could be just about anywhere.  The enterprise fairytale is ubiquitous.

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Poverty in the media – commissioning priorities

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Spectacle are an independent television production company. A recent project looked at how the media portrays people in poverty, working with individuals featured in documentaries like The Tower and Rich Kid Poor Kid. Claire Sharples, project coordinator, reflects on whether poverty can ever be properly portrayed on TV.

Poverty is a problem faced by both individuals and society. Society commentators are an exclusive group, selected via a hierarchy and instated within a system. How representative can their voice be of the individuals who, because of the restrictions of their experience, do not rise through this?

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We must look beyond the stigmatising language

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

George Selmer works in business development for a Welfare to Work provider, supporting people back into jobs.

This morning, the Daily Express leads with a story on ‘benefit cheats’.  In truth, the taxpayers’ money they ’scooped’ was the result of errors by DWP staff that led to overpayment of benefits. The tone of amazement that one ‘benefits cheat’ has recently been given ‘100 years to repay £70,000 at £14 a week’ fails to mention that £14 probably represents a substantial percentage of that individual’s weekly allowance – on which they’d already struggle to make ends meet. The article speaks in the voice of the aggrieved and angry ‘hard-working taxpayer’. It has no interest in the lives behind the phrase ‘benefits cheat’ – their individual circumstances, hopes and dreams, or the weight of geography, history, culture and economics that has put them where they are.

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Beyond us and them – the parallel universe of poverty

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Julian Dobson is Editorial Director of New Start magazine, and this post is reproduced with kind permission from his blog

If a picture is worth a thousand words, a good graphic can sometimes do the job of an entire book. This week the Guardian illustrated the National Equality Panel’s report on inequality within the UK with a double-page spread of graphic delight: elegant, colourful and informative.

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Negative language on welfare reform isn’t working

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

David Coats is Associate Director of Policy at the Work Foundation, and this post has been reproduced with the kind permission of the Open Left blog. In addressing how the Left should renew its fight against poverty, he cites the problem of the current rhetoric around welfare reform, promoted by politicians and picked up by the media.

Tim Horton is right to point to the need for more aggressive redistribution. Unless the centre-Left wins this argument the gap between rich and poor is likely to widen. Declining support for such policies could be seen as an insurmountable barrier and therefore cause for political pessimism.

I remain more optimistic.

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Politicians and the media can work hand-in-glove to demonise the poor

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Josh Fenton-Glynn has worked on UK poverty issues for Oxfam and the Child Poverty Action Group, and is writing in his personal capacity.

Now is an apt time for Community Links to run this much needed debate on media attitudes to poverty and the effect it has on the political discourse. Having worked in policy around UK poverty and social exclusion for the past two years, I have found that one of the biggest barriers to political change is the way people talk about poverty.

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