Open Access
American Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
ISSN (Online): 2378-7031
DOI: 10.46568/arjhss
Conflict Framing: Content Analysis of Peace and War Journalism in Coverage of the Russia-Ukraine War
Abstract
In February 2022, a significant escalation of the Russia-Ukraine War occurred in the form of a full-scale Russian invasion
of Ukraine. This event was widely covered by all major national media outlets in the United States. In addition to television
broadcasts and online live website feeds, media outlets also posted videos on YouTube analyzing the conflict. With these
analyses came the proliferation of both peace journalism and war journalism, terms coined by Johan Galtung to separate
language that promotes de-escalatory and humanizing approaches to the conflict, which is peace journalism, and
language that promotes violence and further escalation, which is war journalism. In this study, a content analysis was
performed on YouTube videos posted by the three American national media outlets with the most YouTube subscribers
(CNN, Fox News, and ABC News). These videos were coded for instances of peace journalism and war journalism, as well
as subcategories of both, with these instances being totaled for each media outlet being analyzed. It was determined that
war journalism was used to a significant extent more often than peace journalism, though different media outlets don’t
have a significant difference in usage of peace and war journalism compared to each other. These findings indicate that,
while war journalism is more prevalent than peace journalism in American national media outlets, the media outlets
themselves don’t have significant differences in reporting between each other