Media framings of the issue of Turkish accession to the EU: a European or national process?
journal contribution
posted on 2014-03-06, 15:48 authored by Thomas Koenig, Sabina MiheljSabina Mihelj, John DowneyJohn Downey, Mine Gencel BekRecent empirical research has argued that there is a movement towards a Europeanized public sphere in the European Union. Based on a representative sample from the British, French, Slovenian, Turkish, and US-American press, this article explores via a novel content analytic method that codes frames semi-automatically through keywords, in how far the discourses about the proposed accession of Turkey to the EU approximate a European public sphere. The findings show that discourses do not fulfill basic standards of democratic deliberation: Not only are there vast differences in the intensity of the debates, but the distribution of the main frames that structure the discourse - a "clash of civilizations" between "Islamic Turkey" and "Christian Europe" on the one hand versus a liberal-multiculturalist project that unifies different civilizations under one political roof on the other - are differently distributed across the countries surveyed. The actual manifestations frames vary by country. All frames employed also consider collectivities rather than individuals the major parties of the discourse, a conception that runs against the tenets of rational-democratic deliberations. © 2006 Interdisciplinary Centre for Comparative Research in the Social Sciences and ICCR Foundation.
History
School
- Social Sciences
Department
- Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies
Citation
KOENING, T. ... et al, 2006. Media framings of the issue of Turkish accession to the EU: a European or national process? Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research, 19 (2), pp.149-169.Publisher
Routledge (Taylor & Francis Group) / © Interdisciplinary Centre for Comparative Research in the Social Sciences and ICCR FoundationVersion
- SMUR (Submitted Manuscript Under Review)
Publication date
2006Notes
This is an Author's Original Manuscript of an article whose final and definitive form, the Version of Record, has been published in the journal Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research [copyright Taylor & Francis], available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13511610600804240ISSN
1351-1610eISSN
1469-8412Publisher version
Language
- en
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