Sensationella berättelser: en studie av nyheter från Angola 1987 och om prinsessan Diana 1997 i dagstidningar, radio och TV
In: [Göteborgsstudier i journalistik och masskommunikation 23]
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In: [Göteborgsstudier i journalistik och masskommunikation 23]
In: Göteborgsstudier i journalistik och masskommunikation 62
In: Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 237-246
SSRN
In: Journal of contingencies and crisis management, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 237-246
ISSN: 1468-5973
AbstractDrawing on rhetorical arena theory, this study investigates the variations of content across communication channels (subarenas), guided by different media logics, during the 2014–2015 Ebola outbreak. Restricting the study to one country, Sweden, a content analysis was conducted of two national newspapers (in total 848 articles), their posts on branded Facebook pages (47) and user comments on these Facebook posts (1,661). Some conclusions to be made are, that content differed between subarenas, with Facebook news being more sensational and focused on human interest stories, and Facebook comments to a greater extent related to other current socio‐political issues. Also, news media were more alarmist than Facebook comments, although alarmism declined on all subarenas as the danger became more tangible.
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 60, Heft 3, S. 748-760
ISSN: 1475-6765
AbstractWe study how Swedish citizens updated their institutional and interpersonal trust as the corona crisis evolved from an initial phase to an acute phase in the spring of 2020. The study is based on a large web‐survey panel with adult Swedes (n = 11,406) in which the same individuals were asked the same set of questions at two different time points during the coronavirus pandemic (t0 and t1). The sample was self‐selected but diverse (a smaller subsample, n = 1,464, was pre‐stratified to be representative of the Swedish population on key demographics). We find support for the view that the corona crisis led to higher levels of institutional and interpersonal trust. Moreover, reactions were largely homogeneous across those groups that could potentially relate distantly to government authorities.