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Ideology, class, crisis and power: the representation of economic crisis and political policy in Ireland (2007-2009)

Silke, Henry (2015) Ideology, class, crisis and power: the representation of economic crisis and political policy in Ireland (2007-2009). PhD thesis, Dublin City University.

Abstract
There is a growing symbiotic relationship between business, communication networks and the mass media. Business depends on communication networks and the mass media in numerous ways; in the actual conduct of business, in the need for market information, for advertising and market creation, and as ideological apparatuses which act to naturalise market economies and defend class interests. In fact it is argued that the contemporary mass media rather than simply reporting on economic issues have become an integral part of economic processes. This thesis explores the role of the mass media and communication networks in economic crises and specifically the Irish economic crisis beginning in 2007/2008. The Irish crisis has deep roots in the country‘s semi-peripheral dependent nature and its weak domestic economy, however, the current crisis is fundamentally a crisis of overproduction (in property) driven by financial speculation. The thesis is grounded in the methods of political economy exploring areas of power, ideology, theories of economic crises, alongside media and communication theories. The study investigates the treatment of the Irish economic crisis by the Irish Times and Irish Independent using framing, discourse and sourcing analyses with the aim of exploring the underlying ideological patterns and processes at work. The thesis looks at three critical periods in the Irish crisis: firstly, the treatment of the property market in 2007; secondly, the treatment of the 2008 blanket banking guarantee; and finally, the treatment of the National Asset Management Agency established in 2009. A market orientated framing is consistently found across the papers alongside a source bias towards financial interests and mainstream politics; which acted to cheerlead the property bubble and fundamentally support government policy in dealing with the crisis.
Metadata
Item Type:Thesis (PhD)
Date of Award:March 2015
Refereed:No
Supervisor(s):Preston, Paschal
Uncontrolled Keywords:Ideology; Class; Irish Economic Crisis; Representations; Bank Guarantee; NAMA; Property Crash; Irish Independent; Irish Times; Press
Subjects:Social Sciences > Journalism
Social Sciences > Mass media
DCU Faculties and Centres:DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Science > School of Communications
Use License:This item is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. View License
ID Code:20427
Deposited On:17 Apr 2015 10:04 by Eugenia Siapera . Last Modified 19 Jul 2018 15:05
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