Thesis

Framing AIDS : communication, power and the global struggle for access to medicines

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Awarding institution
  • University of Strathclyde
Date of award
  • 2014
Thesis identifier
  • T13856
Person Identifier (Local)
  • 200867142
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Department, School or Faculty
Abstract
  • This thesis explores the role of the media and communication in the politics of the HIV/AIDS pandemic and the campaign for access to medicines in the Global South. It consists, firstly, of a comprehensive frame analysis of 'AIDS in Africa' in British (Guardian, Daily Mail, BBC News/Newsnight) and pan-European elite news media (Financial Times, The Economist, European Voice) since the late 1980s. It shows that for much of the past two decades the dominant framing is a crisis whose origins are spatially localised within Africa itself, a 'fact of life' of an innately disease-ridden continent. In the early 2000s, as focus shifted to the North-South confrontation over treatment access, a transnational civil society movement succeeded in rupturing the hegemony of frames, which had rationalised the denial of life-saving medicines to the global poor, and drawing the pharmaceutical industry and Northern governments into the glare of media publicity. More recently, however, a decline in coverage has contributed to a renewed depoliticisation of the AIDS crisis in media discourse. Secondly, through interviews with NGO and pharmaceutical industry lobbyists, EU officials and journalists, the thesis investigates the communication strategies of and relations between the key policy actors involved in the struggle over access to medicines and intellectual property rights. Focusing on the communicative space in Brussels - a key site of power in global trade and health governance - the analysis indicates that policy elites operate almost wholly outside the mediated public sphere and circuits of mass communication. Consequently, despite repeatedly losing the media framing battle, the pharmaceutical industry's capacity to shape EU policy agendas has not significantly diminished. Located at the interface of Media Studies, Political Communication and Political Sociology, the thesis seeks to contribute to a critical understanding of media power and its limits in contemporary post-democratic modes of governance.
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DOI
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  • The electronic version of this thesis is currently under moratorium due to copyright restrictions. If you are the author of this thesis, please contact the Library to resolve this issue.

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