<p></p><p>Chapter 1: Introduction: Reporting Human Rights, Conflicts, and Peacebuilding: Critical and Global Perspectives.- Chapter 2: Human Rights Journalism: Towards a Critical Constructivist Epistemological Approach.- Chapter 3: Advocacy journalism, the Politics of Humanitarian Intervention and the Syrian war.- Chapter 4: Beyond “bearing witness”. Journalists resisting violence in Colombia’s “after war”.- Chapter 5: Re-designing the Media in Humanitarian Interventions Communicating with communities at times of crisis.- Chapter 6: Public service broadcasting and security issues: the case of ‘blowback’.- Chapter 7: Communitarianism, Ethics and the Burden of Journalistic Objectivity: Reflections of ‘Peace Journalists’ Covering the Boko Haram Insurgency.- Chapter 8: The Politics of Representation of Migrants in Italian Media.- Chapter 9: Assessment of Media Coverage of Human Rights Abuses in Internally Displaced Peoples’ Camps.- Chapter 10: Understanding and Practicing Human Rights Journalism in China.- Chapter 11: Unworthy Victims? The media, politics and the search for Justice through the International Criminal Court in Kenya.- Chapter 12: The media, conflict and peace during transitional times: The case of the Herald and the Newsday during the period of the Zimbabwe Government of National Unity (GNU)-2009-2014.- Chapter 13: Re-imaginging Human Rights Photography: Ariella Azoulay’s Intervention.- Chapter 14: Journalists as human rights defenders: international protection of journalists in contexts of violence and impunity.- Chapter 15: Exiled Journalists as Active Agents of Change: Understanding their Journalistic Practices.- Chapter 16: Together and Separate? An exploratory study of political polarization on social media during the 2016 Brazilian political crisis.</p><br><p></p>