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1981
Volume 12, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 2040-199X
  • E-ISSN: 1751-7974

Abstract

Abstract

This study examines how the 2008 election violence was framed in three mainstream Zimbabwean weekly newspapers – and . It was noted that four frames – the victim, justice and human rights, trivialization and attribution of responsibility frames dominated the coverage of electoral violence in these three newspapers. The dominance of the trivializing frame in privileged the ruling party’s (Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front; ZANU PF) interpretation of electoral violence as inconsequential to the electoral process. Simultaneously, the prevalence of the victim, justice and human rights frames in and newspapers signifies the private media’s obsession with ZANU PF’s alleged electoral malpractices and situates these alleged transgressions within a broad global social justice and human rights trajectory to cultivate the West’s sympathy with the ‘victimised’ opposition.

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/content/journals/10.1386/jams_00011_1
2020-03-01
2024-10-14
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