The study investigated and compared the British media's framing of workers during two
months of the Covid-19 pandemic and two months of the 2022-23 strikes. A qualitative content
analysis was conducted of 160 articles from The Guardian, The Independent, The Times and The
Telegraph. The research revealed that during the Covid-19 pandemic, the media utilised three
dominant frames regarding workers: a Precarity frame, a Solidarity frame and a Hero frame. During
the 2022-23 strikes, a Villain frame, ...
The study investigated and compared the British media's framing of workers during two
months of the Covid-19 pandemic and two months of the 2022-23 strikes. A qualitative content
analysis was conducted of 160 articles from The Guardian, The Independent, The Times and The
Telegraph. The research revealed that during the Covid-19 pandemic, the media utilised three
dominant frames regarding workers: a Precarity frame, a Solidarity frame and a Hero frame. During
the 2022-23 strikes, a Villain frame, a Precarity frame and a Conflict frame dominated the media’s
coverage of workers. Guided by theories of disaster capitalism and crisis, the research indicated that
the support shown for workers during the Covid-19 pandemic turned into vilification as workers began
going on strike and asking for pay increases.
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