After all this time? The impact of media and authoritarian history on political news coverage in twelve western countries

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 10-2020
Journal Journal of Communication
Volume | Issue number 70 | 5
Pages (from-to) 744-767
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
Historical classifications of journalistic traditions are the backbone of comparative explanations for political news coverage. This study assesses the validity of the dominant media systems framework and proposes and tests a novel framework, which states that a history of authoritarianism affects today’s coverage. To facilitate a clean cross-national comparison, we focus on the same person and measurement in twelve Western democracies, i.e., the use of the pejorative terms ‘sexist’, ‘racist,’ ‘dictator’ and equivalents to describe Donald Trump. Our manually validated automated content analysis (2016–2018; N = 27,830) shows that content varies along with countries’ media and authoritarian history: pejoration is more common in countries with a polarized pluralist media system and former authoritarian countries than elsewhere. Newspapers’ ideology does not matter, irrespective of countries’ level of political parallelism or experiences with authoritarianism. Combined, we provide new methodological and theoretical handles to further comparative communication research in Western democracies.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary material online.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqaa029
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jqaa029 (Final published version)
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