Agenda Divergence in a Developing Conflict: A Quantitative Evidence from a Ukrainian and a Russian TV Newsfeeds

Posted: 8 Dec 2017 Last revised: 22 Mar 2018

See all articles by Olessia Y. Koltsova

Olessia Y. Koltsova

National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow)

Sergei V. Pashakhin

National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow)

Date Written: December 8, 2017

Abstract

Although conflict representation in media has been widely studied, few attempts have been made to perform large-scale comparisons of agendas in the media of conflicting parties, especially for armed country-level confrontations. In this paper, we introduce quantitative evidence of agenda divergence between the media of conflicting parties in the course of the Ukrainian crisis 2013-2014. Using 45,000 messages from the online newsfeeds of a Russian and a Ukrainian TV channels, we perform topic modelling coupled with qualitative analysis to reveal crisis-related topics, assess their salience and map evolution of attention of both channels to each of those topics. We find that the two channels produce fundamentally different agenda sequences: in particular, while the Russian channel pays little attention to confrontation between the Ukrainian government and the opposition before the regime change, the Ukrainian channel is less inclined to cover armed violence in East Ukraine and refugees after the regime change.

Keywords: news, agenda building, conflict coverage, topic modelling, Ukrainian crisis

JEL Classification: Z

Suggested Citation

Koltsova, Olessia Y. and Pashakhin, Sergei V., Agenda Divergence in a Developing Conflict: A Quantitative Evidence from a Ukrainian and a Russian TV Newsfeeds (December 8, 2017). Higher School of Economics Research Paper No. WP BRP 79/SOC/2017, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3084640 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3084640

Olessia Y. Koltsova (Contact Author)

National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow) ( email )

Myasnitskaya street, 20
Moscow, Moscow 119017
Russia

Sergei V. Pashakhin

National Research University Higher School of Economics (Moscow) ( email )

Myasnitskaya street, 20
Moscow, Moscow 119017
Russia

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