Antal Wozniak
University of Mannheim
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Publication
Featured researches published by Antal Wozniak.
The International Journal of Press/Politics | 2016
Julia Lück; Antal Wozniak; Hartmut Wessler
This study examines the interrelations between journalists and communication practitioners from environmental nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Taking the annual United Nations climate change conferences as a case in point, we show that the exceptional circumstances of these events foster a temporary blurring of the professional boundaries between both actor groups that partly results in a joint production of interpretations. Based on seventy-eight semi-standardized interviews with journalists and NGO representatives, we identify four distinct coproduction networks that pair particular types of journalists and NGO communicators. Our analysis shows that (1) the journalistic beat, (2) the type of media journalists work for, (3) journalists’ and NGOs’ perceived target audiences, and also (4) the NGOs’ strategic orientation toward either lobbying or popular mobilization are decisive for the formation of these networks. Our study helps to systematically explain message production in a transnational context and provides a deeper understanding of the relationship between journalism and public relations.
Environmental Communication-a Journal of Nature and Culture | 2015
Antal Wozniak; Julia Lück; Hartmut Wessler
This paper presents a multimodal research design for the standardized content analysis of climate change coverage in print media. The concepts of framing, narration, and visual representation are integrated into a single coding instrument that can be applied to large-scale media samples from different countries. The proposed research design combines existing measures and novel operationalization. Intercoder reliability scores are reported from a pretest covering newspaper material from Germany, India, South Africa, and the USA. Most variables can be reliably applied across these very different countries, with some exceptions in the more exploratory narrative segment of the analysis. The paper also shows how a multimodal approach to coding climate change coverage can help to avoid potentially one-sided interpretations based on single-mode approaches.
The International Journal of Press/Politics | 2016
Hartmut Wessler; Antal Wozniak; L. Hofer; Julia Lück
This paper presents the first fully integrated analysis of multimodal news frames. A standardized content analysis of text and images in newspaper articles from Brazil, Germany, India, South Africa, and the United States covering the United Nations (UN) Climate Change Conferences 2010–2013 was conducted using a subset of photo-illustrated articles (n = 432) as well as the entire conference coverage (n = 1,311). In the photo-illustrated articles, four overarching multimodal frames were identified: global warming victims, civil society demands, political negotiations, and sustainable energy frames. The distribution of these global frames across the five countries is relatively similar, and a comparison of frames emerging from the national subsets also reveals a strong element of cross-national frame convergence. This is explained by the news production context at global staged political events, which features uniform media access rules and similar information supplies, as well as strong interaction between journalists from different countries and between journalists and other actors. Event-related frame convergence across vastly different contexts is interpreted as one mechanism by which truly transnational media debate can be facilitated that can potentially serve to legitimize global political decisions. In conclusion, perspectives for future qualitative and quantitative multimodal framing research are discussed.
Journalism Studies | 2017
Antal Wozniak; Hartmut Wessler; Julia Lück
The annual Climate Change Conferences (Conferences of the Parties, COPs) held under the auspices of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change are global staged political media events that regularly provide occasions for contesting the framing of global warming in media coverage around the globe. This study assesses which professional group involved in communicating the COPs—journalists, government spokespeople, and representatives from non-governmental organizations (NGOs)—is most successful in seeing their visual framing conceptions represented in mainstream print media coverage. Our analysis combines data from 44 semi-structured interviews with actors from these groups conducted on-site at the COPs in Doha, Qatar (2012) and Warsaw, Poland (2013) with a content analysis of climate change news published in newspapers from five democratic countries around the world. Results show a relative prevalence of NGO-preferred visual framing in COP coverage. Through providing powerful pictures of symbolic actions, civil society actors can prevail in the visual framing contest under certain conditions, but it is much harder for them to circumvent the usually strong statist orientation of mainstream news media in sourcing textual messages.
Archive | 2016
Matthias Potthoff; Antal Wozniak
Hans Mathias Kepplinger, von 1982 bis zu seiner Emeritierung 2011 Professor an der Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz, ist einer der meistzitierten Forscher der deutschen Kommunikations- und Publizistikforschung. Sein 1987 erschienenes Werk „Darstellungseffekte: Experimentelle Untersuchungen zur Wirkung von Pressefotos und Fernsehfilmen“ bietet eine Ubersicht uber elf experimentelle Studien zur Wirkung non-verbaler Aspekte der Medienkommunikation. Entlang eines mehrstufigen Wirkungsmodells visueller Medieninhalte werden Ergebnisse zum Einfluss von non-verbalen Verhaltensweisen dargestellter Politiker wie auch zum Einfluss produktionstechnischer Modifikationen sowie Voreinstellungen der Betrachter auf die Personenwahrnehmung vorgestellt. Die Studien zeigen die besondere Wirkmacht von durch Fernsehbilder oder Fotos vermittelten Charakterfiktionen auf die Wahrnehmung von Politkern durch die Betrachter. Kepplingers Experimente leisteten damit einen wichtigen Beitrag zur Grundlagenforschung uber die Wirkmacht visuell kommunizierter Medienangebote.
Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism | 2016
Julia Lück; Hartmut Wessler; Antal Wozniak; Diógenes Lycarião
This study disentangles national and transnational influences on international journalism by distinguishing convergent issue framing from nationally specific narrative in news texts. In a comparative quantitative content analysis of the newspaper coverage in five democratic countries (Brazil, Germany, India, South Africa, and United States) during four United Nations climate change conferences from 2010 to 2013, both textual-visual framing and narrative features were studied simultaneously for the first time. The narrative dimension consisted of variables that gauge (1) the degree of narrativity in an article, (2) the type of narrative (i.e. stories of catastrophe, conflict, success etc.), and (3) narrative roles of victims, villains, and heroes. Hierarchical cluster analysis was used to identify both the prevailing issue frame in an article and its dominant narrative. Results show that issue frames converge more strongly across countries while narratives are more closely related to the cultural context and political particularities of each country. Investigating issue frames and narratives concurrently helps to reveal country-specific patterns of narrative coloring even for the same issue frame.
International Communication Gazette | 2018
Julia Lück; Hartmut Wessler; Rousiley C. M. Maia; Antal Wozniak
Journalist–source relationships and interactions are interpreted in this study as crucial mechanisms for linking different arenas in a deliberative system. To unravel these source networks, 106 semi-standardized interviews with journalists as well as public relations (PR) professionals from government delegations and non-governmental organizations were conducted on-site three United Nations (UN) climate change conferences between 2010 and 2013, and an online survey was administered during the conference in 2015. The analysis shows that most journalists maintain close relationships with their home country delegation. However, journalists experienced in climate conference coverage also maintain more direct and informal relations to delegations from other countries and to non-governmental organizations while less experienced journalists exhibit loose and more formally mediated relationship to these actors. Moreover, journalists focusing on commentary rather than on event-related reporting have the most variegated and informal networks, thus opening the deliberative system to diverse perspectives and unknown voices more than others. Government delegations vary strongly in their tendency to approach journalists while environmental non-governmental organizations interact with journalists primarily to attract media attention in order to indirectly influence decision makers in national delegations.
Archive | 2017
Antal Wozniak; Hartmut Wessler; Julia Lück
Archive | 2017
Hartmut Wessler; Julia Lück; Antal Wozniak
Archive | 2017
Julia Lück; Hartmut Wessler; Antal Wozniak