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Revista de Comunicación
versión impresa ISSN 1684-0933versión On-line ISSN 2227-1465
Resumen
(USA), Marta Mensa. University of North Texas; (USA), Tracy Everbach. University of North Texas y (USA), Gwendelyn S. Nisbett. University of North Texas. Covering violence against women and girls on the border: Comparing news from Texas and Mexico. Revista de Comunicación [online]. 2025, vol.24, n.1, pp.303-320. Epub 05-Abr-2025. ISSN 1684-0933. http://dx.doi.org/10.26441/rc24.1-2025-3649.
This study investigates violence against women and girls (VAWG) along the Texas-Mexico border through the lens of the news published in newspapers: MyRGV in McAllen (Texas), the El Paso Times in El Paso (Texas), El Mañana de Reynosa in Tamaulipas (Mexico), and El Heraldo de Juárez in Ciudad Juárez (Mexico). It employs a mixed-method approach, conducting quantitative content analysis and qualitative framing analysis. The findings reveal that Mexican newspapers primarily chose to publish stories about murder as the main crime against women and girls, while Texas newspapers focused on sexual violence. Mexican newspapers also covered immigration-related VAWG. Female journalists in Mexico often connected crimes with psychological trauma. Texas newspapers employed episodic framing and victim-blaming, whereas Mexican newspapers framed stories in a victim-supporting manner. Texas newspapers did not distinguish crimes against women from other crimes, whereas Mexican newspapers used the term ‘femicide’ and treated crimes against women and children as gender- and age-specific.
Palabras clave : Border; violence; women; framing; mixed methods..