Ukrainian Community
Date Range
Score Range
portrays Ukrainian athlete as isolated and under exceptional scrutiny
Narrative framing emphasizes Mudryk’s personal struggle and isolation, implying unfair targeting without broader context, subtly othering him as a foreign figure in British football.
“Mudryk has long maintained his innocence and has continued to train individually in the hope of returning. That has included renting the pitch of non-League club Uxbridge.”
framed as being used as proxies in a political attack
[framing_by_emphasis], [cherry_picking]
“A Russian speaker recruited and offered money to Ukrainian men to carry out arson attacks on properties connected to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, a court has heard.”
framing Ukrainian refugees as increasingly excluded from state support
[loaded_language] and [appeal_to_emotion]: Emotional quotes from Ukrainians ('lost', 'desperate', 'huge uncertainty') highlight their sense of marginalisation as supports are withdrawn.
“Ukrainians have described feeling “lost” and “desperate” amidst the announcement of plans to withdraw the accommodation.”
Ukrainian refugees explicitly framed as feeling excluded and unwelcome
[framing_by_emphasis] uses direct quote in headline and lead to foreground exclusion; emotional weight dominates policy context
“We're really lost and feel like we're not welcome anymore, but we don't know what to do. We'll probably hope for some miracle to happen.”
Ukrainians are portrayed as resilient and collectively enduring
Through personal testimony and thematic linkage across generations of trauma, the article emphasizes shared Ukrainian experience of survival, fostering a sense of inclusion and national solidarity.
“When I see someone’s things there, I always think about mine,” she said. “About what remained in my home. About the life that was interrupted.””
Ukrainians portrayed as collectively belonging and morally justified in defending their homeland
[appeal_to_emotion] and [cherry_picking]: Personal narratives emphasize deep ties to Chernobyl as homeland and frame remembrance as an act of national resistance. The omission of international responses or technical assessments centers Ukrainian voices as both victims and guardians, reinforcing inclusion and moral authority.
“I never stop thinking of Chernobyl as my homeland”