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Debating Employment in National TV News: Depoliticised Discourses and Overlooked EU Policies
[journal article]
Abstract This article examines the framing of employment policies in public debates within European Union (EU) member states. (Mediatised) public debate is not merely a medium for discussing employment policy; it constitutes a normative infrastructure of democracy. Therefore, the way employment policies are ... view more
This article examines the framing of employment policies in public debates within European Union (EU) member states. (Mediatised) public debate is not merely a medium for discussing employment policy; it constitutes a normative infrastructure of democracy. Therefore, the way employment policies are framed and discussed (in other words: [de]politicised) in the mediatised public debate informs us about the democratic quality of the political systems we live in. This is particularly true in the European context. EU policies guide and sometimes constrain national employment policies and are strategically used to (de)politicise national debate. The study relies on TV news broadcasts (TNBs) of public broadcasters as a proxy for the public debates. In total, 576 TNBs in France and Belgium are compared in a diachronic perspective (1995-1996; 2005-2006; 2019). Qualitative frame analysis enables to identify how people intervening in the public debate speak about employment policies and whether they frame them as contingent and controversial. Results identify three framings of employment policies through which the EU is discussed in the Belgian and French broadcast public debates: labour market, social rights, and individual factors. In general, results reveal that the EU and its policies are neither blamed nor contested, but are largely overlooked in both countries' national public debates. When this is not the case, the EU and its policies are mostly depoliticised. The depoliticisation in the media is partly explained by a consensual conception of the economy across time, country, and the political spectrum.... view less
Keywords
EU; media; politicization; employment policy; EU policy; news; television broadcast; labor market; social rights
Classification
Media Contents, Content Analysis
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
European Union; framing
Document language
English
Publication Year
2025
Journal
Politics and Governance, 13 (2025)
Issue topic
Debating Europe: Politicization, Contestation, and Democratization
ISSN
2183-2463
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed