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Television News Content of Minority Groups as an Intergroup Context Indicator of Differences Between Target-Specific Prejudices
Authors:Cecil Meeusen  Laura Jacobs
Institution:1. Institute for Social and Political Opinion Research, Centre for Sociological Research, University of Leuven;2. Centre for Citizenship and Democracy, Centre for Political Science Research, University of Leuven
Abstract:Although research has shown that different types of prejudice are highly correlated, the existence of prejudice hierarchies indicates that individuals differentiate between target groups. Here we examine the relationship between television news coverage and differences in attitudes toward minority groups. We rely on intergroup threat theory, tone, and framing theories to formulate our hypotheses and conduct a multimethod study: All prime-time television news items in Flanders (N = 1,487) reporting on five minority groups (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender; Jews; Eastern Europeans; North Africans; Roma) were coded in terms of tone and framing and subsequently combined with individual-level survey data. Patterns in news coverage reflect differences in prejudice: Groups that are most negatively/positively evaluated by the public receive the most negative/positive coverage. Prejudice is especially high for minority groups associated with problems and criminal threat frames in the news. We conclude that news content is an important characteristic of the intergroup context reflecting differences in minority group appraisals in society.
Keywords:
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