PRESS FRAMING OF ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR ON BUHARI’S FIRST YEAR ANNIVERSARY
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Date
2017-12
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Publisher
University of Lincoln
Abstract
Media framing which is at the heart of political communication is concerned with the manner that a particular news item or story is produced. This study analyses how five Nigerian newspapers framed the fight against corruption embarked upon by the Buhari administration one year after his assumption of office. Using newspaper editorials published on Nigeria’s Democracy Day (May 29, 2016), as unit of analysis, it draws on the methodological context of equivalent framing to demonstrate how the selected newspapers have framed the war against corruption which was the major thrust of the ‘Change’ campaign message articulated by Buhari as a Presidential aspirant and his political party (All Progressives’ Congress), during the build-up to the 2015 general elections in Nigeria. Findings suggest that the Press position on national issues, like the anti-corruption war, is subject to ethnic influence and political ownership as revealed by the ‘uncompromising frame’ and the ‘witch-hunting frame.’
Description
Journalism, Political Communication
Keywords
Media, Anti-corruption war, Buhari’s first year anniversary, 2015 Nigerian presidential election, Framing
Citation
Abubakre, F.I. (2017) Press Framing of Anti-Corruption War on Buhari’s First Year Anniversary, Journal of Media Critiques, Vol. 3 (12) 179-191