Participation and Media| News Media Framing of the Anti-Austerity and Pro-“Europe” Movements During the Greek Referendum Protest Cycles

Authors

  • Andreas Kollias Panteion University of Social and Political Science, Athens, Greece
  • Fani Kountouri Panteion University of Social and Political Science, Athens, GReece

Keywords:

Greek 2015 referendum, news framing, protest paradigm, protest cycles, Twitter, sourcing, content analysis

Abstract

This study aims to explore and discuss how Greek news media Twitter accounts reported and framed grassroots protest/support activities of the anti-austerity camp and the pro-“Europe” camp, and their protagonists, grievances, and demands in the days before and after the July 2015 bailout referendum. The Greek referendum offers a special case to study the protest paradigm in complex, hybrid and polarized protest arenas, where two opposing protest camps mobilize massively to achieve their political aims. In total, 1,999 media tweets with references to grassroots protest/support activities and public opinion/citizens’ behavior in relation to the referendum were analyzed using content analysis processes and framing devices. Results show significant differences in frame coverage depending on the protest cycle challenging the protest paradigm, while the media emphasis on high-profile sources confirms key features of this paradigm.

Author Biographies

Andreas Kollias, Panteion University of Social and Political Science, Athens, Greece

Assistant professor in qualitative and quantitative data analysis in social sciences

Fani Kountouri, Panteion University of Social and Political Science, Athens, GReece

Assistant Professor of Political Science-Political Communication, 00302109245152

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Published

2020-06-06

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Section

Special Sections