[FoME] New MeCoDEM Working Paper | Media Framing of Political Conflict: A Review of the Literature

Ines Drefs Ines.Drefs at gmx.de
Di Mai 26 11:50:31 CEST 2015


MECODEM WORKING PAPER:
MEDIA FRAMING OF POLITICAL CONFLICT: A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE (Nebojša Vladisavljević)
 
This working paper from the MeCoDEM series is now available for download at: http://www.mecodem.eu/publications/working-papers [1]
 
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The paper provides a critical overview of the literature on media and conflict by focusing on the ways in which contemporary media frame different types of political conflict. It reveals a fractured field. There is an extensive literature on how media report on wars, on election campaigns and popular protest and social movements in western democracies, as well as some research on media coverage of violent conflicts in non-democratic regimes and democratising states, but there are only limited attempts to draw parallels between the media coverage of different kinds of conflicts and little cross-fertilisation of findings from the disparate literatures.
 
     * Much of the literature discusses the ways in which western media frame foreign conflicts and domestic election campaigns and policy debates, while there is considerably less focus on the media framing of domestic conflicts in non-western settings, such as those that arise during and after transitions from non-democratic rule.
 
     * Several authors claim that reliance on existing models of media and conflict in established western democracies may be misleading in the study of non-western, transitional settings. They therefore call for developing new theories that are more suitable to discern the role that media play in democratisation.
 
     * In contrast, this paper identifies arguments and hypotheses from the existing literature for further exploration in the study of media framing of political conflicts - such as those on citizenship, elections, transitional justice and distribution of power - in transitions from authoritarian rule and in new democracies, which are at the centre of the MeCoDEM project.
 
     * Media coverage of political conflict can only be understood in context. Several dimensions of the political context matter in this respect, such as regime type, international (foreign) or domestic perspectives, the degree of elite consensus, the degree of policy uncertainty, whether or not a conflict takes place within an institutionalised setting, and the stage of democratisation. Also, the literature suggests that media framing influences political outcomes, for example the decisions made by policy makers, the strategic choices of collective actors or popular responses to conflicts
 
ABOUT MECODEM:
MeCoDEM began on 1 February 2014 and will run over three years. The project investigates the interplay of communication and democratisation conflicts in four emerging democracies, Egypt, Kenya, Serbia and South Africa, each of them representing unique aspects of transitional / post-transitional divisions. Based on a comparative case study design, the research covers constitutional conflicts, civic conflicts and conflicts surrounding accountability and good governance. These conflicts constitute arenas of dispute where the media interact with the communicative strategies of governments on the one hand, and political activists and political movements struggling for recognition on the other. MeCoDEM is funded by the European Union within the EU's Seventh Framework Programme. With a budget of 2.2 million Euros, the project consortium includes eight partner institutions from six countries: University of Leeds (co-ordinating institution), University of Belgrade, University of Hamburg, University of Cape Town, University of Oxford, Stockholm University, Ruhr University Bochum and American University in Cairo.
 
FOR FURTHER ENQUIRY:
Prof Nebojša Vladisavljević | n.vladisavljevic at fpn.bg.ac.rs
 
MECODEM CONTACT:
Prof Barbara Thomass | Barbara.Thomass at rub.de
Website: www.mecodem.eu [2] | Twitter: @MeCoDEM [3]
 
Links:
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[1] http://www.mecodem.eu/publications/working-papers
[2] http://www.mecodem.eu
[3] https://twitter.com/MeCoDEM



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