Israel - ethnic differences in access and interpretation of media coverage of the Palestinian conflict
Individual interpretations of violence seen in the conflict between Israel and Palestine are reported in the media and we anticipate participants' perceptions in these scenarios are coordinated from their ethnic point of view. The methodology in Table 1 shows that young people of Jews and Arab Americans reported the same overall media exposure as the Israel-Palestinian conflict (ie "frequently" rather than "every day"). At the same time, however, the measures in Table 1 show that Arab American young people are more aware of Israeli violence, the Jewish American youth believe that Palestinians are increasingly violent. In addition, as expected, the Jewish American youth reported higher level identity with the Israelis described by the media, Arab American young people reported that the media had a higher degree of identity to Palestinians Reported that they had. The two groups in the figure show the pattern of this result. In the photo on the left, two young samples report the total exposure to conflict news, but the Jewish American Youth Report states that mass media Palestinians and Arab American young people reported Israel's number of violent incidents It is reported that it reported that it increased significantly.
This pattern of outcomes may be the result of different observations of the media image on Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but given the small changes in the American media about conflict and the group's overall exposure, these Different interpretations of the same image by young people from two different ethnic groups. To support this view, we self-reported "see local TV news" ((267) = 0.55, ns), "see national television news" ((267) = 0.68, The two groups of ns were not significantly different. Listen to the news on the radio ", (t (267) = 0.19, ns), or" Watch the news on the Internet "(t (266) = 0.87, ns). Furthermore, just as you explain the various views that various people have seen, the figure on the right of Figure 2 shows that on average jewish American teenagers are more likely to "identify" It shows that. ... ') The Israelis they saw were drawn in the context of conflict, and Arab American teenagers were more likely to identify with the Palestinians they saw.
Israel - the Jewish people against the Palestinian conflict - the American view has influenced the Israeli and American governments. Therefore, the Jewish American divorce can take action to promote or suppress the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians. There seems to be several different social psychological beliefs that lead individuals to support persistence of conflict. These beliefs include the emotions of collective victims, the inhumane and illegalization of others, the view of zero sum against conflict, and a single story about conflict. In this exploratory study, Jewish Americans looked at the role of these beliefs in predicting a compromise proposal to refuse or support the Israel - Palestinian conflict. Beliefs on collective victims do not anticipate support for a compromise plan. Discuss the findings based on the central nature of the mistake of the story in hindering the other party's concessions on concessions
Individual interpretations of violence seen in the conflict between Israel and Palestine are reported in the media and we anticipate participants' perceptions in these scenarios are coordinated from their ethnic point of view. The methodology in Table 1 shows that young people of Jews and Arab Americans reported the same overall media exposure as the Israel-Palestinian conflict (ie "frequently" rather than "every day"). At the same time, however, the measures in Table 1 show that Arab American young people are more aware of Israeli violence, the Jewish American youth believe that Palestinians are increasingly violent. In addition, as expected, Jewish American young people believe that the media portrays the high level identity of the Israelites and that Arabian American teenagers are better off than their Palestinian identity He said it was high.
External war and domestic prejudice: the exposure of the media to Israel - how Palestinian conflicts predict the national stereotype of Jewish and Arab American youth