Publisher:
Universidad de Navarra. Facultad de Comunicación
Issued date:
2019
Citation:
Bouza, L., Oleart, Á & Tuñón, J. (2019). Framing EU trade policy online: the case of @NoAlTTIP on Twitter. Communication & Society, 32(4), 257-273
Sponsor:
This article is part of two projects funded by the European Agency for Education, Culture and Audiovisual (EACEA) of the European Commission, Jean Monnet (Erasmus +): Jean Monnet Module EUCOPOL (reference: 587167-EPP-1-2017-1-ES-EPPJMO-MODULE); and Jean
Monnet Network OPENEUDEBATE (reference: 600465-EPP-1-2018-1-ES-EPPJMONETWORK).
This article is also part of another project (FAKENEWS) funded by the Spanish
Research Agency, from the Science, Innovation and Universities department (Reference:
RTI2018-097709-B-I00).
Rights:
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
Abstract:
Since the argumentative turn in EU studies, research has shown that civil society activists can challenge frames promoted by EU institutions and incumbent groups, and influence public opinion in the EU. However, most studies of civil society mobilisation on EUSince the argumentative turn in EU studies, research has shown that civil society activists can challenge frames promoted by EU institutions and incumbent groups, and influence public opinion in the EU. However, most studies of civil society mobilisation on EU issues have focused on the vertical framing of issues from Brussels to national capitals, rarely analysing mobilisation beyond Brussels. This article builds upon ongoing research on Spanish civil society activism on the TTIP (Bouza and Oleart, 2018) and framing EU issues on Twitter (Bouza and Tuñón, 2018), contributing to the study of the role of national activists in the horizontal translation of EU-wide mobilisation to national publics. We argue that national actors play an influential role in the discursive struggle to define Europe and the EU in the (national) public spheres (Díez Medrano, 2003). Building on our previous analysis of national activism on TTIP in Spain, we analyse whether activists have engaged in a process of frame bridging (Snow et al., 1986), in order to expand the mobilisation against TTIP towards new issues and constituencies relating to the broader trade strategy of the EU. The present research addresses the role of the Spanish anti- TTIP social movement in the emergence, circulation and bridging of critical frames on the TTIP negotiations in the Spanish Twitter sphere. The article combines quantitative and qualitative methods network analysis and framing analysis in order to analyse the role of the NoAlTTIP network in the building and diffusion of frames challenging the EU institutions discourse on trade in the Spanish context.[+][-]