ABSTRACT

This book provides an introduction to covering crises, considering practice issues and providing guidance in preparing for and responding to calamities. It offers a concise overview for journalism academics and practitioners of covering disasters – not a "how to" handbook but a "how to prepare" reference to be used before a crisis occurs.

This essential resource is among the first to focus specifically and comprehensively on journalistic coverage of disasters. It demonstrates the application of scholarship and theory to professional practice, and includes a crash book template with logistical and information-collection requirements.

As a text for advanced reporting, broadcast journalism, and journalism ethics, or a reference for professionals, Reporting Disaster on Deadline provides key information for keeping on deadline in responding to crises.

chapter |25 pages

What's Probable and what's Possible

What the Emergency Community Knows and what the Journalists Don't

chapter |18 pages

Terrorism

Disasters that Communicate

chapter |14 pages

The Crash Book Manual for Competitive Coverage

Schematic for Public Service

chapter |12 pages

The Quality of Disaster News

Frames, Disaster Stages, and a Public Health Focus

chapter |12 pages

The Frontline in our Backyard

Journalists as First Responders

chapter |12 pages

Covering Consumer Issues

From Scams to Preparedness

chapter |6 pages

More than just a Victim

Citizen Journalism and Disasters

chapter |14 pages

Roles and Goals

Doing Ethics to Avoid Journalistic Disasters

chapter |3 pages

Conclusions

The Social Impact of Better Journalism