Framing the CAP reform 2013 in Austria's agricultural media

被引:0
作者
Obweger, Andrea [1 ]
Mitter, Hermine [1 ]
Schmid, Erwin [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Inst Sustainable Econ Dev, Dept Econ & Social Sci, Feistmantelstr 4, A-1180 Vienna, Austria
关键词
CAP reform; Communication; European Union; Framing; POLICY; DISCOURSE; NARRATIVES; POLITICS; POWER;
D O I
10.1007/s10460-024-10554-7
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
The reform process of the CAP is increasingly open to actors that apply different frames. Recent research reveals the consistent use of five frames during CAP reform processes: the policy mechanism frame, the farmers' economic frame, the societal concerns frame, the budgetary frame, and the foreign trade frame. Our qualitative content analysis of 1,155 newspaper articles from Austria's largest agricultural newspaper published between 01/10/2010 and 31/01/2015 confirms that these five frames are also used in national CAP reporting and consist of subframes. The European Commission (EC), the European Parliament, and the Council of the European Union, which are involved in the CAP legislative process, mainly use the policy mechanism frame. The farmers' economic frame and the policy mechanism frame are applied throughout the reform process. The societal concerns frame is gradually used over time, while the foreign trade frame is limited to specific events. The budgetary frame increasingly refers to public money for public goods, which indicates that the EC and other actors put efforts into legitimising the CAP. The results emphasise that both, agricultural and environmental actors use agricultural media to generate support for or condemnation of agricultural policy and thereby affect political agenda-setting.
引用
收藏
页码:1393 / 1415
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   The Superfluous Congress: Executive Dominance and Business Lobbying in Mexico's 2013 Tax Reform [J].
Gutierrez, Monica Unda .
MEXICAN STUDIES-ESTUDIOS MEXICANOS, 2021, 37 (01) :93-122
[42]   Who's responsible? A media framing analysis of climate change and meat reduction in Aotearoa New Zealand [J].
Booth, Amanda ;
Blake, Denise ;
Breheny, Mary .
HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL, 2025, 40 (03)
[43]   Deciding Who's Legitimate: News Media Framing of Immigrants and Refugees [J].
Lawlor, Andrea ;
Tolley, Erin .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2017, 11 :967-991
[44]   It's the frame that matters: Immigrant integration and media framing effects in the Netherlands [J].
Bos, Linda ;
Lecheler, Sophie ;
Mewafi, Moniek ;
Vliegenthart, Rens .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS, 2016, 55 :97-108
[45]   Excluding the margins: Indonesian media's framing of women and people with disability in the COVID-19 pandemic reporting [J].
Parahita, Gilang ;
Nurhadi .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED JOURNALISM & MEDIA STUDIES, 2024, 13 (03) :293-314
[46]   Representing National vs Personal Agenda: Media Framing of Indonesia's G20 Presidency in 2022 [J].
Maksum, A. .
VESTNIK MEZHDUNARODNYKH ORGANIZATSII-INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2025, 20 (02)
[47]   Agricultural framing in California's Central Valley: Farming values and climate change policy [J].
Bick, Naomi .
SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL, 2023,
[48]   HOW DO TRADITIONAL MEDIA INCORPORATE STATEMENTS FROM POLITICAL ACTORS IN SOCIAL MEDIA? An analysis of the framing of Jair Bolsonaro's tweets in Brazilian journalism [J].
Mitozo, Isabele Batista ;
da Costa, Gabriella ;
Rodrigues, Carla .
BRAZILIAN JOURNALISM RESEARCH, 2020, 16 (01) :152-177
[49]   Measles, Media and Memory: Journalism's Role in Framing Collective Memory of Disease [J].
Conis, Elena ;
Hoenicke, Sarah .
JOURNAL OF MEDICAL HUMANITIES, 2022, 43 (03) :405-420
[50]   Malaysia's Media Framing of Plastic Pollution: The Case of Imported Plastic Waste [J].
Ong, Sheau Wen ;
Diong, Fong Wei .
ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNICATION-A JOURNAL OF NATURE AND CULTURE, 2023, 17 (07) :689-700