Search Agenda Signals
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Across Topics (36 results)
Framing workers and production crews as vulnerable to sudden corporate decisions with lasting reputational and employment harm
Victim family portrayed as culturally elite and emotionally articulate, implicitly contrasting with suspect’s instability
Portrayed as excluded, mocked, and morally inferior
The accuser is portrayed sympathetically as a regular person standing up to a powerful figure
Workers portrayed as vulnerable and excluded from economic protection
Farmers, hauliers, and fishers framed as deserving of urgent protection and support
Classroom technology framed as more harmful than beneficial to learning
Working-class voters implicitly excluded by focus on elite credentials and media-savvy campaigning
British working public framed as dignified and resistant to exploitation
Framed as morally justified and socially included despite criminal behavior
Working-class identity portrayed as politically disengaged and susceptible to populist appeal
framed as being positively targeted for inclusion through targeted economic investment
Working-class workers are portrayed as historically excluded but now rightfully demanding inclusion and dignity through a living wage
Service worker portrayed as calm and dignified despite abuse
Implies the working class is being symbolically excluded from a political event meant to represent them
Older working-class professionals are portrayed as excluded and losing self-worth due to systemic neglect
framing working-class creatives from Manchester as culturally authentic and morally justified
Framing ordinary people as victims of elite profiteering and policy failure
Ordinary workers are framed as victims abandoned by policy choices, fostering a sense of exclusion
Working/middle-income earners framed as excluded from policy relief
Older working-class men framed as bearing disproportionate burden of war
portrayed as closed off and inaccessible to younger generations
Workers in poor countries are framed as excluded from protection and disproportionately suffering
Working-class victims of fraud are excluded from narrative attention and empathy
Working-class values of frugality and practicality are portrayed as morally superior to elite consumerism
framed as being re-included through Putsch’s outsider appeal
The suspect is reduced to a one-dimensional 'teacher' identity, potentially reinforcing class-based othering
working-class taxpayers framed as burdened by elite environmental mandates
Lower-income and rural Canadians are rhetorically excluded from the policy’s legitimacy, portrayed as incidental beneficiaries rather than primary recipients of needed relief.
Suspect’s conventional, meritocratic life path is highlighted to contrast with deviant act, subtly excluding such individuals from expected criminal profiles
the suspect’s profession is highlighted to subtly other him as an unexpected threat
Suspect is framed as an outlier from expected criminal profiles, reinforcing class-based assumptions about who is capable of violence
rural communities framed as excluded and unfairly targeted
Indirectly excludes suspect’s professional and educational identity by omitting context
Suspect is portrayed as an exceptional, included member of society due to education and achievement
Suspect’s professional background omitted, contributing to dehumanization