Title: Germana DAcquisto
1Germana DAcquisto Cristina Pennarola
- Diplomacy on the web A Linguistic analysis of
the UN Millennium Development Goals
Genres on the Move. Hybridization and Discourse
Change in Specialized Communication University of
Naples Federico II 9-11 December 2009
2Investing in Development brings together the core
recommendations of the UN Millennium Project. By
outlining practical investment strategies and
approaches to financing them, the report presents
an operational framework that will allow even the
poorest countries to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals by 2015.
OXFORD Business Series
3The Millennium Project was commissioned by the
United Nations Secretary-General in 2002 to
develop a concrete action plan for the world to
achieve the Millennium Development Goals and to
reverse the grinding poverty, hunger and disease
affecting billions of people. In 2005, the
independent advisory body headed by Professor
Jeffrey Sachs, presented its final
recommendations to the Secretary-General in a
synthesis volume Investing in Development A
Practical Plan to Achieve the Millennium
Development Goals.
4MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
- 1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- 2. Achieve universal primary education
- 3. Promote gender equality and empower women
- 4. Reduce child mortality
- 5. Improve maternal health
- 6. Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases
- 7. Ensure environmental sustainability
- 8. Develop a global partnership for development
5AIMS
- Examine the hypertextual evolution of the genre
of the UN report - Analyse the way in which the UN official
documents on the Millennium Development Goals are
mediated on the UN website -
6METHOD
- Qualitative and quantitative analysis
- Features investigated
- Textual organization
- Visuals
- Register
- Pronouns
- Modal verbs
7MATERIALS
- K. Annan, 2000, We the peoples. The role of the
UN in the 21st century www.un.org/millennium/sg/re
port/ - UN The Millennium Development Goals Report 2008
- www.un.org/millenniumgoals/pdf/The20Millennium2
0Development20Goals20Report202008.pdf - UN 2008 Committing to action Achieving the MDGs
www.un.org/millenniumgoals/2008highlevel/pdf/commi
ting.pdf - UN 2007 Student voices against poverty. The
Millennium Campaign Curriculum Project - www.un.org/works/Lesson_Plans/MDGs/MDG_Curriculum
_US.pdf - MDGs webpages
- MDGs briefing papers
8CRITICAL FRAMEWORK
- Discourse Analysis (Fairclough 2003, 2006)
- Genre Analysis (Bhatia 1993, 2004)
- Digital genre analysis (Askehave, Nielsen 2005
Kwasnik, Crowston 2005 Medina et al. 2005
Santini 2007) - Multimodal Discourse Analysis (Brugger 2009
Garzone et al. 2007 Lemke 1999) - Diplomatic discourse (Bellier 2005 Donahue,
Prosser 2007 Gregory 2008 Kurbalija Slavik
2001)
9OUTLINE
- Analysis of the genre of the UN report and its
hypertextual variant - Analysis of the Millennium Project campaign on
the UN website
10Background readings (1)
- Communication with other cultures has always
been central to diplomacy. The essence of the
diplomats work lies in the relations between
countries and peoples. Important decisions in
international relations and related fields affect
citizens of more than one nation, therefore the
question of whether communication between people
of different nations is effective and whether all
parties emerge with the same understanding is of
crucial importance.
(http//www.diplomacy.edu/Conferences/LD1/default.
htm)
11THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS REPORT
- A self-legitimating discourse
- a kind of shop window of international
organizations, their own representation of their
discourses to the outside world - (Maingueneau 2002 119- 132 Rist 2002)
12The UN REPORT
- S(PR)E structure
- Situation
- Problem
- Response
- Evaluation
- Langue de bois i.e. formulaic style (the
rhetoric of the challenge and development) - Absence of interactional markers
- Double readership experts and lay people
- (cf. Bellier 2005 Donahue, Prosser 2007
Maingueneau 2002 Rist 2002)
13The UN Millennium Report held together by
purpose all parts of the document were prepared
for a particular meeting, activity, or
initiative.
14No linear access to information. It is divided
according to a hierarchical structure based on
the following four agendas 1) development
2)security 3)environment 4)reforms
15(No Transcript)
16THE UN MUST BE OPENED UP
UN General Assemby 2000 A/54/2000
17Impact of slogans
18A BRIEFING PAPER
19SUCCESS STORIES
20HUMAN INTEREST STORIES
21THINK. KNOW. ACT.
22WHY YOU? You might think that achieving all of
the Goals by 2015 is the responsibility of
politicians, and that there is little you can do
to help. Nothing could be further from the truth.
To achieve the goals, the world need everyone
young people, aids activists, religious leaders,
environmentalists, unions, civil society
organizations, and women's rights activists -
everyone concerned about our future - to work
together and make sure the goals become a
reality.
23What can YOU do?
More and more, young people are asking me this
encouraging question What can I do to make
things better? My advice is always start by
learning and looking around you. Get to know
people whose lives are different from yours. Find
out what you have in common with them. Build
bridges of understanding with them.
"If something has not been done before, it does
not mean it can't be done it only means you
could be the first to do it."
24WHERE DO I FIT IN ?
We need a grand alliance of young people, AIDS
activists, women activists, health workers,
environmentalists, teachers, unions, civil
society organisations, and labour unions
everyone who is concerned
THE GOALS WONT BE MET WITHOUT YOUR VOICE!
25Hypertexts in diplomacy
- Present information in multiple layers
- Make vast amounts of information manageable
- Include transtextual references
- (Kurbalija 2001)
26Pre-text (negotiation phase)
- International legal documents are the result of
long negotiations, proposals and
counter-proposals, and the interplay between
actors. Each agreement is negotiated within a
specific social, political and technological
context if that context changes, the application
of norms changes as well. - (Kurbaljia 2001)
27Post-text
- Once adopted, a text has life of its own. In the
case of international legal documents, the
post-text steps include ratification and
implementation. Even with the most precise and
carefully negotiated formulations, application in
real life brings new implications and sheds new
light on existing texts. - (Kurbaljia 2001)
28Criteria for Analysis of Hypertext Accessibility
- Treaties, agreements, conventions, reports of
international conferences, and other diplomatic
documents are usually long texts fragmented into
smaller, self-contained segments, modules or
articles. - (Kurbaljia 2001)
29Documents should be transtextual.
- Transtextuality is a strong characteristic of
diplomatic documents, which include a complex and
visible net of references to other documents,
conventions, reports, and texts. - (Kurbaljia 2001)
30 - In the Millennium Declaration, world leaders
were confident that humanity could, in the years
ahead, make measurable progress towards peace,
security, disarmament, human rights, democracy
and good governance. - Millennium Report
- The new millennium, and the Millennium Summit,
offer the worlds peoples a unique occasion to
reflect on their common destiny, at a moment when
they find themselves interconnected as never
before. - Briefing papers
31MODALS
32PERSONAL PRONOUNS
33WE INCLUSIVE AND EXCLUSIVE
- We need to remind ourselves why the United
Nations exists - for what, and for whom. -
- At the national level we must govern better,
and at the international level we must learn to
govern better together. We the peoples. The role
of the UN in the 21 century - What are we doing to our planet? Briefing
Paper Climate change -
34CONCLUSIONS
- Evolution of the genre of the international
report in a hypertextual format - UN institutional communication on the web at the
interface of promotional educational
discourses - Dialogism, interactivity and the pedagogy of
positiveness (Gomez de Matos 2005)
Think of the language you use as a
peace-building, peace-making, peace-promoting
force
35- Bellier I. 2005 Anthropology of institutions and
discourse analysis, R. Wodak, P.A. Chilton eds. A
new agenda in (critical) discourse analysis,
Benjamins, 243-265 - Bhatia V. K. 1993. Analysing Genre. Language Use
in Professional Settings. London Longman. - Bhatia V.K. 2004. Worlds of Written Discourse A
Genre-based View. London Continuum. - Donahue T., M. H. Prosser. 1997, Diplomatic
discourse international conflict at the United
Nations Ray Greenwood Publishing - Fairclough N. 2003 Analysing Discourse. Textual
Analysis for Social Research. London Routledge. - Fairclough N. 2006. Language and Globalization.
London Routledge. - Garzone G., Poncini G., Catenaccio P. (eds.)
2007. Multimodality in corporate Communication.
Web genres and discursive identity. Milano
FrancoAngeli. - Gomes de Matos F. 2001 Applying the pedagogy of
positiveness to Diplomatic Communication,
Language and Diplomacy. Malta DiploProjects. - Gregory B. 2008. Public Diplomacy Sunrise of an
Academic Field, The Annals of the American
Academy of Political and Social Science, 616,
274-290. - Kurbalija J. 2001 Hypertext in Diplomacy,
Language and Diplomacy. Malta DiploProjects. - Maingueneau D. 2002 Les rapports des
organizations internationales un discours
constituant?, G. Rist ed. Les mots du pouvoir.
Paris PUF, 119-143.