Sarcouncil Journal of Arts Humanities and Social Sciences

Sarcouncil Journal of Arts Humanities and Social Sciences
An Open access peer reviewed international Journal
Publication Frequency- Monthly
Publisher Name-SARC Publisher
ISSN Online- 2945-3488
Country of origin- PHILIPPINES
Impact Factor- 4.1
Language- English
Keywords
- Anthropology, History, Geography, Archeology, Business Administration, Communication, Criminology, Economics, Education, Humanities, Laws, Government, policies, Linguistics, International Relations, Political Science, Geography, History, Law, Peace Studies, Psychology.
Editors

Dr Hazim Abdul-Rahman
Associate Editor
Sarcouncil Journal of Applied Sciences

Entessar Al Jbawi
Associate Editor
Sarcouncil Journal of Multidisciplinary

Rishabh Rajesh Shanbhag
Associate Editor
Sarcouncil Journal of Engineering and Computer Sciences

Dr Md. Rezowan ur Rahman
Associate Editor
Sarcouncil Journal of Biomedical Sciences

Dr Ifeoma Christy
Associate Editor
Sarcouncil Journal of Entrepreneurship And Business Management
Saudi and U.S. Newspaper Coverage of Saudi Vision 2030 Concerning Women in Online Newspapers
Keywords: Saudi women, media representation, Saudi Vision 2030, news framing, U.S. newspapers, Saudi newspapers
Abstract: This study investigates how issues concerning Saudi women have been represented in selected U.S. and Saudi publications. Saudi Vision 2030 is the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's development strategy which was revealed on April 25, 2016. This study used 115 news items across selected newspapers as its sampling. The New York Times and the Washington Post were the two chosen to represent US newspapers. Al Jazirah and Al Watan, the chosen to represent 2. This thesis examines how these issues were covered before and during the implementation of Saudi Vision 2030. The news pieces were analyzed using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. The qualitative study employed an inductive technique to uncover frames. Furthermore, this dissertation looked at how American and Saudi publications had framed Saudi women depicted in images by reviewing the photographs used in news reports about Saudi women's issues. The primary conclusion implies that the human-interest frame was more prevalent in American media, whereas the economic frame was more prevalent in Saudi publications. A variety of diverse topics were considered
Author
- Ziyad Mansour Alghamdi
- Student University of North Texas USA