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Professor Lilie Chouliaraki

Professor Lilie Chouliaraki

Chair in Media and Communications

Department of Media and Communications

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Room FAW.7.01D
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Languages
English
Key Expertise
humanitarian communication

About me

Professor Lilie Chouliaraki is Chair in Media and Communications in the Department of Media and Communications at LSE. She has a background in Languages and Linguistics, having completed her MA and PhD at Lancaster University Department of Linguistics, before which she studied for a bachelors degree at the School of Philosophy, University of Athens.

Her research has a strong interdisciplinary orientation, drawing on Social and Cultural Theory, Moral Philosophy and Sociology, Visual Communication and Social Semiotics as well as Discourse Theory and Analysis. Her main interest lies in understanding how the media shape our ethical and political relationship to vulnerable others in the global South but also in the global North; how claims to pain intersect with power relations to inform the ways we witness vulnerable others and the ways we are invited to feel, think and act towards them. Her empirical material has included , ,  as well as , studying these in a historical perspective and across mass and digital media.

More recently, Professor Chouliaraki has turned her attention to histories of the victim and  in the context of emotional capitalism, social media platforms and far-right populism. Her award-winning book on the topic,  was published with Columbia University Press in 2024.

She is the recipient of a number of international distinctions for her publications, including the  (ICA, 2014);  (ICA, 2015);  (ICA, 2023);  (ICA, 2025) and  (ICA, 2025) - the only two-time recipient of this prestigious award. 

In 2020, Professor Chouliaraki was announced as an , in recognition of her distinguished scholarly contributions to the field of media and communications.

Expertise Details

Victimhood and the far Right; Humanitarian communication; War and conflict reporting; Crisis journalism; Media ethics; Media representations of suffering and violence; Critical Discourse Analysis; Visual Communication.

Awards and prizes

  • In 2025, Prof Chouliaraki's book   was awarded the Outstanding Book of the Year by the International Communication Association (ICA) and the Best Book Award of the Philosophy, Theory and Critique Division, ICA.
  • In 2023, Prof. Chouliaraki’s co-authored article  Journalism, 23 (3). 649 – 667 was awarded an Honorable Mention of the Journalism Studies Division of the International Communication Association.
  • In 2020, Prof Chouilaraki was awarded an from the International Communication Association (ICA) in recognition of her distinguished scholarly contributions to the broad field of communication.
  • In 2015, Prof Chouliaraki's book  was awarded Outstanding Book of the Year by the Interntional Communication Association (ICA).
  • In 2012, Prof Chouliaraki's article  was awarded Outstanding Paper of the Year in the ICA Journalism Studies Division.
  • In 2010, Prof Chouliaraki's article  was awarded Top Paper of the Year in the ICA Journalism Studies Division.

 

Research

Professor Chouliaraki's main research focus lies in the mediation of human vulnerability, and she has spent the past two decades exploring four key domains within which human vulnerability appears as a problem of communication: disaster news, humanitarianism, migration and war. In her work on the mediation of disaster news, Professor Chouliaraki has shown the ways in which Western national and trans-national television networks follow hierarchical patterns in their narrative organisation of news on distant suffering and, hence, in the systematic distribution of ethical sensibilities towards distant others. In so doing, she concluded, they reproduce global hierarchies of place and human life, along a West/non-West axis (The Spectatorship of Suffering, Sage, 2006/2011).

In subsequent work, Prof. Chouliaraki focuses on humanitarian and human rights communication, exploring how the mediation of solidarity has changed in the course of the past fifty years. Looking into NGO appeals, rock concerts, celebrity advocacy and post-television disaster news, she demonstrates how major institutional (the commercialisation of the aid and development field), technological (the rise of new media) and political (the fall of grand narratives) transformations have also changed the moral imperative to act on distant others in need. As a consequence, she argues, solidarity has today become not about conviction but choice, not vision but lifestyle, not others but ourselves - turning us into the ironic spectators of other people's suffering (The Ironic Spectator. Solidarity in the Age of Post-humanitarianism, Polity, 2012). She has also coedited a state-of-the art collection on the present challenges and directions of the field, the Routledge Handbook of Humanitarian Communication (with Anne Vestergaard, Routledge, 2021).

More recently, Professor Chouliaraki's work has turned to the communication of migration. Together with Prof. Myria Georgiou, she draws on multi-method research on the biggest migration event of the 21st century in the west - the 2015 migration “crisis” and its aftermath up to 2020 - to unpack the complexity and contradictions of the border in the age of datafication. In their book The Digital Border. Migration, Technology, Power (New York University Press, 2022), Chouliaraki and Georgiou develop a holistic theory of the digital border as an assemblage of technological infrastructures (from surveillance cameras to smartphones) and media imaginaries (stories, images, social media posts) to tell the story of migration as it unfolds in Europe’s outer islands as much as its most vibrant cities. The digital border that emerges in their study, they argue, is neither fully digital nor totally controlling. Rather, it is both digital and pre-digital; datafied and embodied; automated and self-reflexive; and traversed by fragile social relationships that entail both the despair or inhumanity and the promise of a better future.

Prof. Chouliaraki’s current work encompasses a study of the digital witnessing of war through smartphone devices or on social media platforms such as You Tube (published in Popular Communication, Information, Communication and Society; Visual Communication, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Media War and Conflict; and more recently with Dr Omar al-Ghazzi, in Journalism).At the same time, Prof. Chouliaraki critical study of the histories and current uses of “victimhood” in the cultural politics of the Anglo-American world has just been published as  by Columbia University Press. Listen to a podcast with Prof Chouliaraki for , where she discusses the main themes of her book.

An overarching interest in Prof. Chouliaraki’s work is Discourse Theory and Analysis. She has written on discourse as a theoretical approach and as a methodological tool is her book Discourse in Late Modernity. Rethinking Critical Discourse Analysis (co-authored with Norman Fairclough, Edinburgh University Press, 2000) and in numerous publications (Social Semiotics, Journal of Management Studies; Linguistics and Education, Critical Discourse Studies; The Handbook of Cultural Analysis).

Publications

Books

  • Chouliaraki, L. (2024) Wronged: The Weaponization of Victimhood. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231193290. Outstanding Book of the Year Award, International Communication Association 2025. Best Book Award of the Philosophy, Theory and Critique Division, ICA. Buy from  or 
  • Chouliaraki, L. and Georgiou, M. (2022) The Digital Border: Migration, Technology, Power. NYU Press. ISBN 1479873403. Buy from  or .
  • Chouliaraki, L. (2012)  Polity Press, Cambridge, UK. ISBN 9780745642109. Outstanding Book of the Year Award, International Communication Association 2015. Buy from  or 
  • Chouliaraki, L,, ed. (2012) . Routledge, London, UK. ISBN 9780415672122
  • Chouliaraki, L. and Morsing, M., eds. (2010) . Macmillan Publishers Limited, Basingstoke, UK. ISBN 9780230515512
  •  Chouliaraki, L., ed. (2007) . Benjamins current topics. John Benjamins Publishing, Philadelphia, PA. ISBN 978902722233
  • Chouliaraki, L. (2006) . SAGE, London. ISBN 978076197039
  • Chouliaraki, L. and Fairclough, N. (1999)  Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, UK. ISBN 9780748610822

 

Other publications

  • Chouliaraki, L. and Stupart, R. (2025)  International Journal of Communication. ISSN 1932-8036 (In Press).

  • Chouliaraki, L. and Al-Ghazzi, O. (2022)  Journalism, 23 (3). 649 - 667. ISSN 1464-8849  (ICA, 2023).

  • Chouliaraki, L. (2021)  European Journal of Cultural Studies, 24 (1). 10 - 27. ISSN 1367-5494

Teaching and supervision

Postgraduate teaching

Professor Chouliaraki convenes the MC501. Advanced Doctoral Seminars for 3rd and 4th- year PhD students and contributes to the postgraduate course MC429. Humanitarian Communication as well as to the team-taught postgraduate Media and Communications courses relating to Discourse and Multi-Modal research methodologies (/).

Doctoral supervision

Professor Chouliaraki supervises doctoral students whose topics include the use of AI (museum holograms) in the transmission of Holocaust testimonies; the mobilization of male victimhood in online misogynist activism; techno-orientalist representations of AI in popular fiction; the institutional restructuring of photojournalism in the digital newsroom.

Applicants with backgrounds in social science disciplines including media and cultural studies, communication and discourse studies, political science, sociology and gender studies are encouraged to apply.

Professor Chouliaraki's current doctoral supervisees are Gal Ravia, Sindhoora Pemmaraju, Hatty Liu and Lewis Bush.

Media

  • Professor Lilie Chouliaraki discusses her award-winning book  (Columbia University Press, 2024) with Prof. Roland Bleiker and Cormac Opdebeeck-Wilson at the School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland. Watch . 

  • Professor Lilie Chouliaraki discusses the moral implications of the use of celebrities by humanitarian organisations, part of her award-winning book  (Polity, 2013) with Prof. Conor Gearty, LSE. Watch .