Imagine All the Forces: The Impact of Threatening News Coverage on the Willingness to Militarily Engage in the Resurgence of the East Versus West Conflict
A world divided into East versus West: The so-called Ukraine crisis has once more summoned outdated patterns of political thinking. Simultaneously, media discourses have flared up debating diplomatic and military solutions as possible policy responses. A majority of Germans, however, have remained h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of media psychology 2017-01, Vol.29 (2), p.102-108 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A world divided into East versus West: The so-called
Ukraine crisis has once more summoned outdated patterns of political thinking.
Simultaneously, media discourses have flared up debating diplomatic and military
solutions as possible policy responses. A majority of Germans, however, have
remained hesitant to advocate any escalation of military conflict. We were
interested in how far reputable journalism concerning the Ukraine crisis might
activate a disposition toward military engagement. To evaluate
the supposed impact of actual news coverage, we used explicit existential
threats (mortality salience; MS) as a comparative measure. Typical effects of MS
were derived from terror management theory (TMT), which predicts that the
awareness of existential threats amplifies the efforts to defend one's
own culture, even by military means. We used a 2 × 2
factorial design (N = 112) with the factors
article (original bellicose vs. neutral, nonmilitant depiction) and salience
condition (MS vs. control). Results revealed a strong impact of the original,
bellicose article, with increased willingness to deploy German forces at the
Russian border, independently of the salience condition. Additional existential
threats did not add further effects, as values for willingness were already very
high. Classic effects regarding TMT were observed when people had read the
Non-Militant article. Here, the willingness to deploy forces only increased
after a confrontation with existential threats. We conclude that threatening
news coverage on the Ukraine crisis has the ability to alter willingness for
first-step military action at the Russian border by inducing effects that are
- at least in their outcome - comparable to explicit existential
threats. |
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ISSN: | 1864-1105 2151-2388 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1864-1105/a000180 |