ABSTRACT

International development stakeholders harness communication with two broad purposes: to do good, via communication for development and media assistance, and to communicate do-gooding, via public relations and information. This book unpacks various ways in which different efforts to do good are combined with attempts to look good, be it in the eyes of donor constituencies at large, or among more specific audiences, such as journalists or intra-agency decision-makers.

Development communication studies have tended to focus primarily on interventions aimed at doing good among recipients, at the expense of examining the extent to which promotion and reputation management are elements of those practices. This book establishes the importance of interrogating the tensions generated by overlapping uses of communication to do good and to look good within international development cooperation.

The book is a critical text for students and scholars in the areas of development communication and international development and will also appeal to practitioners working in international aid who are directly affected by the challenges of communicating for and about development.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Communication in international development: towards theorizing across hybrid practices

part I|77 pages

“For” and “about”: Interrogating practices across domains

chapter 1|18 pages

A “Success Story” Unpacked

Doing good and communicating do-gooding in the Videoletters Project

chapter 2|19 pages

“Doing Good” and “Looking Good” in Global Humanitarian Reporting

Is philanthro-journalism good news? 1

chapter 3|18 pages

Shifting Development Discourses in Public and in Private

The case of the Scotland–Malawi partnership

chapter 4|20 pages

Communication about Development and the Challenge of doing Well

Donor branding in the West Bank

part II|73 pages

What next? Rethinking conventional approaches

chapter 5|19 pages

Becoming Visible

An institutional histories approach to understanding the practices and tensions in communication for development

chapter 6|17 pages

For Celebrity Communication about Development to do Good

Reframing purpose and discourses 1

chapter 7|18 pages

Communication and Evaluation

Can a decision-making hybrid reframe an age-old dichotomy?

chapter |7 pages

Epilogue

What’s bad about “looking good”? Can it be done better?