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They will hate us for this: effects of media coverage on Islamist terror attacks on Muslims' perceptions of public opinion, perceived risk of victimization, and behavioral intentions
被引:3
|作者:
Zerback, Thomas
[1
]
Karadas, Narin
[2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Zurich, Dept Commun & Media Res, Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Univ Zurich, Evaluat Off, Zurich, Switzerland
关键词:
opinion climate;
terror;
meta-stereotypes;
persuasive press inference;
reciprocal effects;
religious identity;
national identity;
SOCIAL IDENTITY THREATS;
GROUP IDENTIFICATION;
META-STEREOTYPES;
PERSUASIVE PRESS;
NEWS COVERAGE;
MASS-MEDIA;
IN-GROUP;
DISCRIMINATION;
AMERICANS;
CATEGORIZATION;
D O I:
10.1093/hcr/hqac030
中图分类号:
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号:
05 ;
0503 ;
摘要:
While research has intensively studied the effects of media coverage of Islamist terror on non-Muslims, our knowledge about how it affects Muslims themselves is still limited. Following , we distinguish between undifferentiated and differentiated news on Islamist terror, i.e., news reports that explicitly establish or deny a link between Muslims or Islam and Islamist terror. In a 1 x 4 randomized experiment, we exposed N = 423 German Muslims to four different news conditions (terror differentiated, terror undifferentiated, criminal act, and a control group). Our results show that Muslims infer a negative picture of public opinion toward their group from news articles about Islamist terror, with stronger effects for undifferentiated depictions. Moreover, this notion leads to an increased perceived risk for the ingroup to fall victim to xenophobic violence. A strong German national identity attenuated the effects, whereas Muslim identity had no moderating effect.
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页码:227 / 237
页数:11
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