Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun, The Times, The Guardian and Daily Mirror), this article demonstrates that press coverage of the financial crisis, recession, and austerity in the UK between 2007-2014 drew heavily on a neoliberal discourse. Political, market, and civil society actors discussed the impact of hard times on people using a reductionist neoliberal narrative, framing people as “economic actors” and consistently underplaying any social or political traits. By examining communicative, rather than coordinative, discourse this research expands the focus of previous studies which have examined the embeddedness of ideology in society, and highlights potential links to ...
This paper focuses on the patterns discerned in the communicative construction of economic crises by...
The Media and Austerity examines the role of the news media in communicating and critiquing economic...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...
Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun...
The 2008 financial crisis initially appeared to challenge the sustainability of neoliberal finance c...
By analysing UK media narrations surrounding the global financial crisis, this thesis presents a cri...
The past few years have seen a breakdown of trust in political, financial, and media institutions an...
The financial crisis of 2007-2009 shook the world economically and politically. It also challenged t...
The reassertion of neoliberal public policy in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis was achi...
The austerity measures adopted after the financial crisis of 2008-2009 accelerated the critical scho...
This article analyzes neoliberal articulations of the economic crisis in Greece, as they appear at t...
In 2008, the financial crisis exploded onto the global scene, causing a world-wide recession and dam...
This chapter introduces my doctoral research, which contributes an analysis of Westminster definers’...
This article examines the role of models of capitalism in the media coverage surrounding the economi...
In this paper we analyse the discourse of austerity in British broadsheets. Theoretically, we combin...
This paper focuses on the patterns discerned in the communicative construction of economic crises by...
The Media and Austerity examines the role of the news media in communicating and critiquing economic...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...
Using political claims analysis on 1,000 articles from five national newspapers (Daily Mail, The Sun...
The 2008 financial crisis initially appeared to challenge the sustainability of neoliberal finance c...
By analysing UK media narrations surrounding the global financial crisis, this thesis presents a cri...
The past few years have seen a breakdown of trust in political, financial, and media institutions an...
The financial crisis of 2007-2009 shook the world economically and politically. It also challenged t...
The reassertion of neoliberal public policy in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis was achi...
The austerity measures adopted after the financial crisis of 2008-2009 accelerated the critical scho...
This article analyzes neoliberal articulations of the economic crisis in Greece, as they appear at t...
In 2008, the financial crisis exploded onto the global scene, causing a world-wide recession and dam...
This chapter introduces my doctoral research, which contributes an analysis of Westminster definers’...
This article examines the role of models of capitalism in the media coverage surrounding the economi...
In this paper we analyse the discourse of austerity in British broadsheets. Theoretically, we combin...
This paper focuses on the patterns discerned in the communicative construction of economic crises by...
The Media and Austerity examines the role of the news media in communicating and critiquing economic...
Why has the financial crisis not led to more radical public contestation and political reforms? In i...