Responsible Terrorism Coverage (ResTeCo). A Global Comparative Analysis of News Coverage About Terrorism from 1945 to the Present

Project Directors Prof. Dr. Hartmut Wessler, Prof. Scott Althaus, Prof. Dr. Wouter van Atteveldt Project Staff Dr. Chung-hong Chan, Timo Dobbrick DFG, NEH, NWO-funded 2017 – 2021

Research question/goal:

The ResTeCo project aimed to develop new knowledge, theories, tools, and data to empower a broad range of innovative research on the relationship between news coverage and terrorist activities around the world. It is a joint effort of three groups of researchers at the University of Illinois, the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and the University of Mannheim. The Mannheim team worked on the following three areas: 1) studying the normative aspects of responsible terrorism coverage, 2) investigating how coverage given to terrorist attacks changes with respect to characteristics of the attack, and 3) developing new text-analytic methods for analysing terrorism coverage.

For area 1), we developed a multiperspectival normative assessment framework to clarify appropriate normative expectations towards terrorism coverage (Wessler et al., 2021). In this paper for the journal Communication Theory, we also provided concrete recommendations for journalists and social media users on how to communicate about terrorist attacks responsibly.

For area 2), two automated content-analytic studies of international coverage of terrorist attacks were undertaken. In the first study, which appeared in the International Journal of Communication (Chan et al., 2020), we disentangled how the emotional tone of terrorism coverage changes when it is combined with the topics of refugees and Islam, respectively, in a particular news item. We found, for example, that only in Christian-majority countries the emotion fear in terrorism coverage is heightened when the topic is mixed with Islam (but not refugees). In the second study, presented at the 70th annual conference of the International Communication Association (Chan et al., 2020), we disentangled how attacks perpetrated by Islamist and right-wing extremists were reported differently around the globe. We identified a consistent trend of overreporting Islamist attacks as terrorist attacks in Western media outlets but also in public diplomacy outlets from China and Russia (e.g. Sputnik, China Daily). This trend was not observed in other non-Western media outlets. Both studies point to significant cultural and structural determinants of terrorism coverage that have not been systematically studied before.

For area 3), in an article published in Communication Methods and Measures, we developed a new technique to extract cross-lingual topics in multilingual corpora (Chan et al., 2020). We also established best practices for measuring news sentiment, published in Computational Communication Research (Chan et al., 2021).


Publications

Journal Articles

  • Chan, Chung-hong, Hartmut Wessler, Marc Jungblut, Kasper Welbers, Scott Althaus, Joseph Bajjalieh, Wouter van Atteveldt (2024): Challenging the Global Cultural Conflict Narrative: An Automated Content Analysis on How Perpetrator Identity Shapes Worldwide News Coverage of Islamist and Right-Wing Terror Attacks. International Journal of Press-Politics, 29, 4, 1064-1089. More
  • Chan, Chung-hong, Hartmut Wessler, Eike Mark Rinke, Kasper Welbers, Wouter van Atteveldt, Scott Althaus (2020): How Combining Terrorism, Muslim, and Refugee Topics Drives Emotional Tone in Online News: A Six-Country Cross-Cultural Sentiment Analysis. International Journal of Communication, 14, 3569–3594. More
  • Chan, Chung-hong, Jing Zeng, Hartmut Wessler, Marc Jungblut, Kasper Welbers, Joseph Bajjalieh, Wouter van Atteveldt, Scott Althaus (2020): Reproducible Extraction of Cross-lingual Topics (rectr). Communication Methods and Measures, 14, 4, 285-305. More
  • van Atteveldt, Wouter, Scott Althaus, Hartmut Wessler (2020): The trouble with sharing your privates. Pursuing ethical open science and collaborative research across national jurisdictions using sensitive data. Political Communication, 38, 1-2, 192-198. More

Presentations

  • Wessler, Hartmut (2019): Responsible terrorism coverage. How media can cover attacks without serving terrorist agendas. [Hertie School of Governance: Frontline Research on Terrorism Event Series, Berlin, 29/09/2019 - 29/09/2019]. More