Does the Type of News Coverage Influence Donations to Disaster Relief? Evidence from the 2008 Cyclone in Myanmar
Volume
4
Pagination
499 - 505
DOI
10.20965/jdr.2009.p0499
Journal
Journal of Disaster Research
Issue
ISSN
1881-2473
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This paper examines the relationship between media coverage of a major natural disaster and charitable giving for disaster relief, focusing on three questions: first, was media coverage of Cyclone Nargis in May 2008 correlated with charitable giving to disaster relief in Myanmar? Second, were charitable contributions earmarked for disaster relief in Myanmar impacted by the occurrence of a second major natural disaster – the May 2008 earthquake in Wenchuan, China? Third, how did different types of news stories affect same-day charitable giving to disaster relief efforts in Myan-mar? These questions are analyzed in a rich multi-variate regression framework, and results show that charitable giving is indeed correlated with media cov-erage, that donations to disaster relief in China appear to compete with those to disaster relief in Myanmar, and that “event-driven” news stories strongly and pos-itively influence the level of giving whereas news stories classified as “institutional” or “human-interest” do not have any discernible impact.
Authors
Brown, PH; Wong, PYCollections
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