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Portuguese digital news coverage on the global south : the case of Latin America

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:In recent years, the demands for better journalistic representation of all regions have intensified, as it is argued that most news stories have a Western perspective, which often misrepresents and underrepresents non-Westerners. Although many of the studies on the representation of non-westerners have been based in countries with large newspaper industries, those conducted in Portugal remain scarce. In addition, those focusing on entire regions such as Latin America, are fewer in number, as previous Portuguese research focused only on Brazil. The objective of this research is to analyze in depth the coverage of all Latin American countries in the online versions of the Portuguese newspapers Público, Diário de Notícias and Observador. To conduct this study, a theoretical framework on media imperialism and the representation of non-westerners was employed, as well as a mixed methodology combining content analysis (SPPS version 28), critical discourse analysis (socio-cognitive approach) and interviews. In the end, 557 articles were collected between May 1, 2023 and June 30, 2023. The results show that Portuguese newspapers continue to cover the region in mainly negative events such as crisis and violence. In addition, it was found that countries historically and culturally close to Portugal and economically stable countries have better coverage than the rest. The Western perspective of superiority was also found in some articles, revealing that Portuguese online newspapers continue to promote the assumption that the West knows better than non-Westerners. The results corroborate previous studies, according to which Portuguese newspapers represent the region poorly and insufficiently, demonstrating that little progress has been made in improving their representation.
Autores principais:Durán Blanquel, Mayra Paloma
Assunto:Media Representation Latin America Portugal Journalism Post-colonialism Misrepresentation Underrepresentation Global North Global South Western Non-western Representação América Latina Jornalismo Pós-colonialismo Deturpação Sub-representação Norte Global Sul Global Não ocidentais Ocidentais
Ano:2024
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:dissertação de mestrado
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Veritati - Repositório Institucional da Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Descrição
Resumo:In recent years, the demands for better journalistic representation of all regions have intensified, as it is argued that most news stories have a Western perspective, which often misrepresents and underrepresents non-Westerners. Although many of the studies on the representation of non-westerners have been based in countries with large newspaper industries, those conducted in Portugal remain scarce. In addition, those focusing on entire regions such as Latin America, are fewer in number, as previous Portuguese research focused only on Brazil. The objective of this research is to analyze in depth the coverage of all Latin American countries in the online versions of the Portuguese newspapers Público, Diário de Notícias and Observador. To conduct this study, a theoretical framework on media imperialism and the representation of non-westerners was employed, as well as a mixed methodology combining content analysis (SPPS version 28), critical discourse analysis (socio-cognitive approach) and interviews. In the end, 557 articles were collected between May 1, 2023 and June 30, 2023. The results show that Portuguese newspapers continue to cover the region in mainly negative events such as crisis and violence. In addition, it was found that countries historically and culturally close to Portugal and economically stable countries have better coverage than the rest. The Western perspective of superiority was also found in some articles, revealing that Portuguese online newspapers continue to promote the assumption that the West knows better than non-Westerners. The results corroborate previous studies, according to which Portuguese newspapers represent the region poorly and insufficiently, demonstrating that little progress has been made in improving their representation.