This chapter explores how newspapers in Denmark and Norway both verbally and visually framed and personalized risk and crisis assessments and scenarios following the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014. Our point of departure is media samples from the two Nordic countries in two different periods of the outbreak. We investigate how authorities, non-governmental organizations and victims were used as sources and personalized in the mediated narratives. Whereas health authority sources provide risk assessments based on statistical predictions, NGOs such as Médecins Sans Frontières’s coverage rather build on narrative evidence and personalization that focus on victims in stricken African nations. However, although the ways in which health au...
This article examines how Norwegian and UK health authorities used social media, and especially Twit...
The Ebola Virus Disease epidemic in West Africa in 2014 with over 11,000 deaths made headlines world...
This paper examines the use of social media, especially Twitter, by British and Norwegian health aut...
In 2014 the largest Ebola outbreak in history occured. The media reporting on the epidemic was inten...
Media in modern society uses their influence and power to frame social phenomenon in society from po...
This chapter investigates how European media and their public make sense of Ebola and how the newest...
Media are an indispensable partner in health communication but, there is often concern about how the...
This study examines the role of international media framing in coverage of Ebola. A quantitative con...
Having examined series of studies on media framing of health issues, a knowledge gap was noticed. Pe...
This edited volume explores how journalists and other media actors apply personalized frames and nar...
Abstract Introduction The 2014 Ebola virus outbreak in parts of West Africa marked the 25th occurre...
The outbreak of ebola 2014 and the outbreak of covid-19 2019 affected our societies in a lot of ways...
65 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Journalism and Communication and the Clark Honors ...
This study examines how the three most influential local newspapers in Sweden, Helsingborgs Dagblad,...
This study utilizes a qualitative interpretive descriptive analysis to evaluate the construction of ...
This article examines how Norwegian and UK health authorities used social media, and especially Twit...
The Ebola Virus Disease epidemic in West Africa in 2014 with over 11,000 deaths made headlines world...
This paper examines the use of social media, especially Twitter, by British and Norwegian health aut...
In 2014 the largest Ebola outbreak in history occured. The media reporting on the epidemic was inten...
Media in modern society uses their influence and power to frame social phenomenon in society from po...
This chapter investigates how European media and their public make sense of Ebola and how the newest...
Media are an indispensable partner in health communication but, there is often concern about how the...
This study examines the role of international media framing in coverage of Ebola. A quantitative con...
Having examined series of studies on media framing of health issues, a knowledge gap was noticed. Pe...
This edited volume explores how journalists and other media actors apply personalized frames and nar...
Abstract Introduction The 2014 Ebola virus outbreak in parts of West Africa marked the 25th occurre...
The outbreak of ebola 2014 and the outbreak of covid-19 2019 affected our societies in a lot of ways...
65 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Journalism and Communication and the Clark Honors ...
This study examines how the three most influential local newspapers in Sweden, Helsingborgs Dagblad,...
This study utilizes a qualitative interpretive descriptive analysis to evaluate the construction of ...
This article examines how Norwegian and UK health authorities used social media, and especially Twit...
The Ebola Virus Disease epidemic in West Africa in 2014 with over 11,000 deaths made headlines world...
This paper examines the use of social media, especially Twitter, by British and Norwegian health aut...