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Biased Social Media Debates About Terrorism? : A Content Analysis of Journalistic Coverage of and Audience Reactions to Terrorist Attacks on YouTube

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Rothenberger, Liane ; Hase, Valerie:
Biased Social Media Debates About Terrorism? : A Content Analysis of Journalistic Coverage of and Audience Reactions to Terrorist Attacks on YouTube.
In: Social media + society. (24. Oktober 2024). - 12 S.
ISSN 2056-3051

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Volltext Link zum Volltext (externe URL):
https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051241290113

Kurzfassung/Abstract

Social media are an important source of news during crises such as terrorist attacks. However, how news media and their audiences make sense of terrorism on social media is subject to bias, for example, given their differential treatment of terrorism by right-wing versus Islamist extremist perpetrators. In this study, we analyze how incident- and perpetrator-related characteristics of terrorist attacks are associated with bias in public debates about terrorism on YouTube. We focus on selectiveness in which attacks are covered (gatekeeping bias), how attacks are covered (presentation bias), and how audiences react to coverage (audience bias). Methodologically, we employ a manual and an automated content analysis of terrorism coverage by five international broadcasters on YouTube (N = 643, 2018–2020) and related user comments (N = 193,721). Our findings illustrate how sociocultural contexts shape news bias in terrorism coverage, both in the form of gatekeeping bias and presentation bias—but we conclude with less evidence for audience bias in public reactions to terrorism, at least on social media. Consequently, journalists should critically question working routines in covering crises to avoid reinforcing power imbalances, especially those from Western contexts.

Weitere Angaben

Publikationsform:Artikel
Schlagwörter:terrorism, crisis communication; YouTube; news coverage; user comments; bias; social identity theory; computational methods; automated content analysis
Sprache des Eintrags:Englisch
Institutionen der Universität:Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaftliche Fakultät > Journalistik > Professur für Medien und Öffentlichkeit mit Schwerpunkt Migration
DOI / URN / ID:10.1177/20563051241290113
Open Access: Freie Zugänglichkeit des Volltexts?:Ja (Förderung durch DFG-Mittel)
Peer-Review-Journal:Ja
Verlag:SAGE
Die Zeitschrift ist nachgewiesen in:
Titel an der KU entstanden:Ja
KU.edoc-ID:33782
Eingestellt am: 25. Okt 2024 09:30
Letzte Änderung: 06. Nov 2024 10:39
URL zu dieser Anzeige: https://edoc.ku.de/id/eprint/33782/
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