Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey

<span class="abs_content">This paper explores the complex relationship between media and political systems in the context of the International News Flow, regarding the interdisciplinary research area between media study and International Relations. The focus is on International News...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Domenico Fracchiolla
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Coordinamento SIBA 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/dab0d2f0bff446dbaf9add5af038e4cb
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:dab0d2f0bff446dbaf9add5af038e4cb
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:dab0d2f0bff446dbaf9add5af038e4cb2021-11-21T15:11:42ZJournalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey1972-76232035-660910.1285/i20356609v13i3p1559https://doaj.org/article/dab0d2f0bff446dbaf9add5af038e4cb2020-11-01T00:00:00Zhttp://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/paco/article/view/23063https://doaj.org/toc/1972-7623https://doaj.org/toc/2035-6609<span class="abs_content">This paper explores the complex relationship between media and political systems in the context of the International News Flow, regarding the interdisciplinary research area between media study and International Relations. The focus is on International News Flow interactions and effects upon democratic political systems. The aim is to fill the gap concerning international relations in comparative media analysis literature. Despite using Hallin and Mancini's framework (2004, 2012), the present research does not only apply their typology to test its validity, but it also applies the main International Relations theoretical frameworks that deepen the relationship between media and political systems to shed light on the degree of superimposition between structure-based and content-based frameworks of media systems. The case study is the 2016 failed military coup in Turkey. In particular, in terms of coverage and analysis, the study considers how the newspapers of four countries (Italy, France, Germany and England), which represent the three democracy models of Hallini and Mancini – Mediterranean, Liberal, Corporative plus one that cuts across different models – framed the failed coup attempt in the days following the beginning of the crisis.</span><br />Domenico FracchiollaCoordinamento SIBAarticleinternational news flowframingwestern democracies modelsfailed coup in turkeyinternational arenaPolitical science (General)JA1-92ENPartecipazione e Conflitto, Vol 13, Iss 3, Pp 1559-1574 (2020)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic international news flow
framing
western democracies models
failed coup in turkey
international arena
Political science (General)
JA1-92
spellingShingle international news flow
framing
western democracies models
failed coup in turkey
international arena
Political science (General)
JA1-92
Domenico Fracchiolla
Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey
description <span class="abs_content">This paper explores the complex relationship between media and political systems in the context of the International News Flow, regarding the interdisciplinary research area between media study and International Relations. The focus is on International News Flow interactions and effects upon democratic political systems. The aim is to fill the gap concerning international relations in comparative media analysis literature. Despite using Hallin and Mancini's framework (2004, 2012), the present research does not only apply their typology to test its validity, but it also applies the main International Relations theoretical frameworks that deepen the relationship between media and political systems to shed light on the degree of superimposition between structure-based and content-based frameworks of media systems. The case study is the 2016 failed military coup in Turkey. In particular, in terms of coverage and analysis, the study considers how the newspapers of four countries (Italy, France, Germany and England), which represent the three democracy models of Hallini and Mancini – Mediterranean, Liberal, Corporative plus one that cuts across different models – framed the failed coup attempt in the days following the beginning of the crisis.</span><br />
format article
author Domenico Fracchiolla
author_facet Domenico Fracchiolla
author_sort Domenico Fracchiolla
title Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey
title_short Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey
title_full Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey
title_fullStr Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Journalism Models in Western Democracies and the International Arena: The Case of the 2016 Failed Coup Attempt in Turkey
title_sort journalism models in western democracies and the international arena: the case of the 2016 failed coup attempt in turkey
publisher Coordinamento SIBA
publishDate 2020
url https://doaj.org/article/dab0d2f0bff446dbaf9add5af038e4cb
work_keys_str_mv AT domenicofracchiolla journalismmodelsinwesterndemocraciesandtheinternationalarenathecaseofthe2016failedcoupattemptinturkey
_version_ 1718418731983437824