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Published byWilliam Neal Modified over 8 years ago
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Recognizing Bias in Media Coverage of Israel F OCUS ON F ACTS
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M EDIA F OCUS
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I DENTIFYING M EDIA B IAS
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M EDIA B IAS Bias can manifest in a number of ways Factual errors Lack of balance Omission of important facts and context Double standards Editorializing in a news story
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F ACTUAL E RRORS Detecting factual errors can be difficult Follow breaking events closely Know your Middle East history Modern and Ancient Keep up on the many related subjects reported on by the media Lots of information available on the CAMERA websiteCAMERA
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L ACK OF B ALANCE Focusing on only one side's point of view Preponderance of space and/or time given to presenting a single viewpoint Proponents of opposing points of view given equal weight? Both quoted directly? Or… Is one side summarized and paraphrased while the other is expressed directly?
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O MISSIONS Omissions are a frequent problem in reporting about the Middle East Missing important facts and context 10-month settlement freeze Previous offers of statehood Egypt controls a border with Gaza Thousands of rockets and missiles from Gaza Palestinian media incites hatred of Jews Many, many more
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D OUBLE S TANDARDS One group is singled out for more criticism Gender segregated buses in Israel condemned State-sanctioned discrimination against women in Arab countries ignored Different terms used to describe the same phenomenon Perpetrators of atrocities against Americans called “terrorists” Perpetrators of atrocities against Israelis called “militants”
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E DITORIALIZING Statements should be properly attributed, not the personal opinion of the reporter Loaded terms and emotional buzzwords “Occupied Palestinian land” “Illegal Jewish settlements” “Arab East Jerusalem”
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H EADLINES
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S EPARATE AND U NEQUAL Headlines and photo captions are not written by the reporter May not reflect the story accurately Photos may not be connected to story Preponderance of photos may reflect “one side”
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W HAT ’ S THE P ROBLEM ? Israeli airstrikes wound ZERO medics Raid on smuggling tunnels and metal workshops (likely rocket factories) Strike in response to terrorist attack from Gaza
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W HAT ’ S THE P ROBLEM ? The bus “explodes,” no one actively blows it up The picture shows a Palestinian from Gaza, not an Israeli from Jerusalem The Palestinian was “killed,” his car didn’t just “explode”
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W HAT ’ S THE P ROBLEM ? A warplane “blows up” a minivan but the Palestinians “respond” In kind? Did Hamas target military targets or civilians? Senior Hamas “militants,” not “terrorists”
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M ONITORING THE M EDIA
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K EEP Y OUR E YES O PEN Analyze the headlines Monitor the photographs Keep track of the op-eds Analyze the articles Individual stories and long-term trends
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A NALYZE THE H EADLINES Are they distorted consistently? Focused on Israel’s response to terror, not on the acts of terror that provoked the response Passive verbs when Israelis killed but active for Palestinians “3 Die in Tel Aviv” vs. “Palestinians Kill Mother, 2 Toddlers” “Israelis Kill 9 Palestinians” False moral equivalence “4 Palestinians, 3 Israelis Killed” vs. “Palestinians Kill 3 Israelis in Home Invasion; Israeli Response Kills 4 Hamas Terrorists”
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M ONITOR THE P HOTOGRAPHS Sympathetic to the Palestinians but routinely show the Israelis only as a military presence Pictures of Palestinian children but Israeli soldiers After a terrorist attack… Photo of the terror victims, their family and/or gripping scenes from the bombing or of family members of the terrorist? If there was an Arab attack against Israel and a response from Israel, are photos only of the damage to Palestinian areas? Are there many more photos of Palestinian children than Israeli children?
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M ONITOR THE P HOTOGRAPHS Are the photographs altered? Cropped to distort Photoshopped to mislead
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K EEP T RACK OF O P -E DS Are anti-Israel op-eds balanced over time with pro-Israel voices? Are op-eds, editorials, or letters allowed to contain outright errors, fabrications or unsubstantiated claims? Are corrections made when the newspaper is notified of the error?
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A NALYZE THE A RTICLES Are the article topics of actual relevance to the ongoing conflict? Are there articles about the societies not just the conflict? Daily concerns of people living there Examples of freedom and democratic values or the lack thereof Are terrorists called terrorists or euphemisms, such as activist, protester, operative or militant? Are the terrorists who are killed and their families inappropriately given more descriptive, human interest coverage than the terrorists' victims and their families? Are death tallies presented honestly? Most Palestinians killed were combatants, while most Israelis killed were civilians killed in terrorist attacks
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A NALYZE THE A RTICLES Is there balance? Human interest stories about both Israelis and Palestinians, or more human interest stories about Palestinians Israeli mainstream or government position heard from, or an emphasis on fringe Israeli perspectives? Israelis allowed to rebut specific allegations made against them in the article or are they asked about unrelated insignificant issues? Is there context and key information provided? The key causes of the ongoing conflict: Incitement and anti-Semitism Delegitimizing and rejection of Israel
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I NDIVIDUAL S TORIES & L ONG -T ERM T RENDS Contact the editor about individual instances of unfair or inaccurate reporting Keep track of the coverage in a consistent way Document at least 2 months of coverage The editor may sincerely believe that his coverage is fair, but you will be able to educate him that there is consistently slanted presentation of the news about Israel
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