The Ukraine conflict and the European media: A comparative study of newspapers in 13 European countries

Author:

Fengler Susanne1,Kreutler Marcus1,Alku Matilda2,Barlovac Bojana3,Bastian Mariella1,Bodrunova Svetlana S4,Brinkmann Janis1,Dingerkus Filip5,Hájek Roman6,Knopper Simon7,Kus Michal8,Láb Filip6,Lees Caroline9,Litvinenko Anna10ORCID,Medeiros Débora11,Orlova Dariya12ORCID,Ozolina Liga13,Paluch Anna8,Nicoleta Radu Raluca14,Stefanikova Sandra15,Veldhoen Henrik1,Zguri Rrapo16

Affiliation:

1. TU Dortmund University, Germany

2. University of Erfurt, Germany

3. University of Belgrade, Serbia

4. Saint Petersburg State University, Russia

5. Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW), Switzerland

6. Charles University, Czech Republic

7. Fontys University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands

8. University of Wroclaw, Poland

9. University of Oxford, UK

10. Emmy Noether Junior Research Group, Germany

11. Free University of Berlin, Germany

12. National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine

13. Turiba University, Latvia

14. University of Bucharest, Romania

15. Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism, UK

16. University of Tirana, Albania

Abstract

The crisis in Ukraine was one of the dominant topics in international news coverage of 2014 and the following years. Representing a conflict along the lines of an East-Western confrontation unprecedented since the end of the Cold War, the news reporting in different European countries with different historical backgrounds is an essential research topic. This article presents findings of a content analysis examining coverage of the conflict in the first half of 2014 in newspapers from a diverse set of 13 countries: Albania, Czech Republic, Germany, Latvia, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, as well as Ukraine and Russia. Drawing on prior literature on news values, key events, and news cycles in foreign coverage, this study maps the evolution of the conflict in the course of four key events and identifies specific characteristics of the coverage in different newspapers. The results show that attention for the conflict varies considerably across the countries, which might be traced back to different degrees of geographical and cultural proximity, domestication, and economic exchange, as well as lack of editorial resources especially in Eastern Europe. Russia dominated the news agenda in all newspapers under study with a constant stream of conflict news. Contradicting prior literature, media sought to contextualise the events, and meta-coverage of the media’s role in the crisis emerged as a relevant topic in many countries with a developed media system.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication

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