Publication | Closed Access
What Is the Relationship between Hate Radio and Violence? Rethinking Rwanda's “Radio Machete”
259
Citations
8
References
2007
Year
Citizen JournalismMedia ViolencePublic OpinionCommunicationExtreme ViolenceMedia StudiesJournalismSocial SciencesCensorshipPolitical CommunicationHate RadioContent AnalysisLateral ViolenceMedia InstitutionsHate SpeechRwandan GenocideCrime Against HumanityHate Radio PervadesGenocideInternational RelationsInternational CommunicationGlobal MediaPolitical ConflictConflict StudyArtsPolitical Science
The importance of hate radio pervades commentary on the Rwandan genocide, and Rwanda has become a paradigmatic case of media sparking extreme violence. However, there exists little social scientific analysis of radio's impact on the onset of genocide and the mobilization of genocide participants. Through an analysis of exposure, timing, and content as well as interviews with perpetrators, the article refutes the conventional wisdom that broadcasts from the notorious radio station RTLM were a primary determinant of genocide. Instead, the article finds evidence of conditional media e fects, which take on significance only when situated in a broader context of violence.
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