"In many ways, this book is a simple and straightforward product of social science research. A conceptual expectation was created through the integration and extension of existing theory and research findings. The responsiveness argument presented in chapter 2 lead to the expectation that aid bureaucracies will try to roughly match the levels of aid they offer with their perception of the domestic political importance of the recipient. It was argued that the news media provide a simple, clear and easily accessible indicator of that importance and, as a result, it was expected that aid bureaucracies will respond to the content of the news media by matching development aid allocations with levels of coverage. From that conceptual foundation, a comparative battery of tests were conducted to evaluate the empirical implications of that expectation, and to address at least a few of the obvious potential objections or critiques. In analysis after analysis, the predicted relationship was found: aid levels and media coverage are clearly correlated." (Page 137)
1 Introduction: The Convergence of Three Areas of Study, 1
2 Foreign Aid, Foreign Policy and Bureaucratic Politics: Theories and Policy Motives, 7
3 A Baseline for Further Analysis: News Media Coverage and Levels of U.S. Development Aid, 35
4 A First Point of News Coverage and British Foreign Aid, 51
5 Elite Bureaucracy: News Coverage and French Foreign Aid, 65
6 The Challenge of a Disaggregated Aid Program: News Media Coverage and Japanese Development Aid, 79
7 The Multilingual Context of a Smaller Power: News Media Coverage and Canadian Development Aid, 103
8 An Event-Driven Aid Program: News Media Coverage and U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, 119
9 Bureaucracy, Democracy, the Media and Foreign Aid, 137