CPCR Seminar by Dr Fatima el Issawi
CPCR Current Events
- CPCR Seminar by Dr Fatima el Issawi
- New Foundations Research Project
- CPCR hosts: Transitional Justice event
- (In)Access&Distance: A survivor/victim-centred analysis of transitional justice
- CPCR Film Screening: Wave Goodbye to Dinosaurs
- CPCR & CHA host: Covert warfare and the performance of humanitarian neutrality in Cold War Central America
- CPCR hosts: Two Nonviolent Actions A Day Keep the Dictator Away?
- CPCR & DFA host event: Mapping Peace and Conflict Research in Ireland
- CPCR hosts: The Women’s Activities in Armed Rebellion Project
- CPCR Annual Conference 2024
- CPCR Seminar: Invisible Men: The Injured Lives of Afghan Interpreters
- Talk4Peace/CPCR Seminar: Mechanisms for Inclusive Dialogue in Peacebuilding
- CPCR Seminar: I have to speak - Colombia and Uganda, Dr Evelyn Pauls
- CPCR publishes on "Mapping Diversity, Negotiating Differences"
CPCR Seminar: Reporting in Conflict Zones by Dr Fatima el Issawi
Guest Speaker: Dr Fatima el Issawi
Title: “Reporting in Conflict Zones”
Time/Date: 4pm Tuesday 23rd September 2025
Room: F301 Newman Building
RSVP: (opens in a new window)dawn.walsh@ucd.ie by 5pm Friday 19th of September
Fatima el Issawi is a Professor of Journalism and Media Studies at the University of Essex (UK). Her research investigates the interplay between journalistic practices, media policy, social movements and conflicts in the Global South, with a focus on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Her expertise crosses journalism, public communication, policy and academia. She has over fifteen years of experience as international correspondent in conflict zones in the MENA region. She is the author of “Arab National Media and Political Change” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) and the co-editor of “The Unfinished Arab Spring: Micro-Dynamics of Revolts between Change and Continuity” (Gingko, 2020).
The talk will present a case study on reporting conflict in extremely dangerous conditions, based on interviews with a sample of Lebanese journalists who covered the latest war with Israel from the frontlines. The aim is to question the normative ideal of detached journalism and its applicability to non-Western conflict-ridden context. The talk employs anthropological analytical frameworks to explain journalists’ resilience as an act of belonging and survival.