Capturing the News: Trump and the Voice of America.

VOA

Register for this Zoom talk

12 PM EST

Monday, August 7, 2023

The Public Diplomacy Council of America, the USC Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy, and the GWU Institute for Public Diplomacy & Global Communication are pleased to invite you to the August 7 First Monday Forum featuring Dr. Kate Wright, who will discuss the new Oxford University Press book Capturing the News: Trump and the Voice of America.

Kate Wright is an associate professor of media and communications, based in the Politics and International Relations Department at the University of Edinburgh. She is a former BBC journalist, who specialized in flagship news and investigative documentaries. She now researches how different political economies shape the production of international news. She is the author of Who’s Reporting Africa Now? Non-governmental Organizations, Journalists and Multimedia (2014), and co-authored Humanitarian Journalists (2022).

Along with her co-authors Martin Scott (University of East Anglia) and Mel Bunce (University of London), she asks: “How did the Trump administration capture one of the world’s most important public service news networks?” This book uses rare interviews and an analysis of private correspondence and internal documents, to explain why and how Voice of America (VOA) became intensely politicized from 2020–2021.

The book analyzes how political appointees, White House officials, and right-wing media influenced VOA—changing its reporting of the Black Lives Matter movement, the presidential election, and its contested aftermath.

They argue that Trump allies took control of the network’s financial and human resources, dominated its governance structures, and instigated intimidating investigations into journalistic “bias.” Some journalists tried to resist, but others were too exhausted and fearful, particularly those in the organization’s language services.

The book puts these events in historical and international context—and develops a new analytical framework for understanding government capture and its connection to broader processes of democratic backsliding.

They argue that there is currently too little to prevent a future US administration with authoritarian tendencies from capturing VOA and converting it into a major domestic broadcaster. They use this research to recommend practical ways of protecting the network and other international public service media better in future.

The program will take place at noon on August 7 via Zoom. To register, click here.

Korean Public Diplomacy and Peace Building in Northeast Asia 

 

Thursday, April 27, 2023, 12:00 – 1:00 pm ET   
Dr. Seung-Keun Lee is a professor in the Political Science Department at Keimyung University in Daegu, South Korea and a Visiting Scholar at IPDGC. 
 
The event will be hosted at the GW Institute for Korean Studies at the Elliott School of International Affairs.

Abstract: In Northeast Asia, no region-wide security regime was created, mainly due to the diverse histories, cultural roots and the peculiar local patterns of rivalry and enmity among the four regional Powers – the United States, China, Japan and Russia. Northeast Asia still contains possible causes of disputes such as the Korean Peninsula issue, China-U.S. conflicts in many fields, etc. Public Diplomacy – as a practice of foreign policy amid the changes of global diplomatic paradigms will be an answer to build peace especially in Northeast Asia which is the battleground of major powers. Facing uncertainty of its security, South Korea as a middle power has performed its public diplomacy to build international support for sustainable peace on the Korean Peninsula and in Northeast Asia by sharing its history, traditions, culture, arts, values, etc. with foreign nationals. At this talk, Dr. Lee will attempt to forecast the kind of diplomatic relations that should be enhanced by South Korea to build peace in Northeast Asia, especially through its public diplomacy.

Thursday, April 27, 2023 |    12:00 – 1:00 pm ET  

Suite 503, Chung-wen Shih Conference Room, GW Institute for Korean Studies, Elliott School of International Affairs, 1957 E St NW , Washington, DC 20052

RSVP

VIDEO: PD Fellow Chris Teal on State Dept Career Panel

On Wednesday, February 22, 2023, IPDGC sponsored “Career Chat: Opportunities at State.” Undergraduate and graduate students were invited to join an informational chat about career opportunities at the US State Department. Sharing their experiences will be Christopher Teal and Sean O’Neill, Senior Foreign Service Officers currently teaching at GW. Teal is the IPDGC public diplomacy fellow. Special thanks to Teal and O’Neill for sharing their wisdom and experiences with our students.

VIDEO: Public Diplomacy – Its Strategic Imperative and Why It Matters Now More than Ever

On Monday April 3rd at 12 pm, The Honorable Lee Satterfield, Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) spoke at April’s First Monday Forum. 

First Monday Forums are cosponsored by the Public Diplomacy Council of American, George Washington University’s Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication and the USC Annenberg Center for Communication Leadership & Policy.

Dean Alyssa Ayres of the Elliott School for International Affairs welcomes Assistant Secretary Satterfield.

It took place in the Lindner Family Commons Room on the 6th floor of the Elliott School of International Affairs at 1957 E Street NW. 

Lee Satterfield is Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs (ECA), leading the State Department’s global efforts to
engage individuals through academic, cultural, professional, sports, and
youth exchanges. Previously, Ms. Satterfield was President and Chief
Operating Officer at Meridian International Center, a non-profit center for
diplomacy that strengthens engagement between the United States and the
world. At Meridian she directed daily operations and spearheaded major
strategic initiatives, including the launch of the Center for Diplomatic
Engagement, the Center for Global Leadership, an organization-wide
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Taskforce and the expansion of cultural
diplomacy programs.

She previously served in the Obama Administration as Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State in the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Prior to
that, Ms.  Satterfield was Deputy Chief of Protocol of the United States. In
the Clinton Administration, Ms. Satterfield held several senior positions
including Chief of Staff to Secretary Alexis Herman at the Labor
Department, and Special Assistant to the President and Staff Director for
The White House Office of Public Liaison. A native South Carolinian,
Satterfield graduated from the University of South Carolina with a Bachelor
of Arts in Journalism.