Abstract (eng)
Femicides and intimate partner violenceaffect women in patriarchal structures worldwide, including in Germany and Austria. Femicides news coverage is characterized by problematic patterns of victim blaming and trivialization. Potential effects of femicide reporting have not been studied so far, though. However, stereotyping effects from mentioning the nationality of suspects are well documented. To focus on the previously neglected role of victims and the interplay of nationalities for this relationship, we conduct a survey experiment with N = 374 participants in Germany. We present them with articles on femicides in which we manipulate the nationalities of victims and perpetrators (German/Afghan/undisclosed). We can observe a negative effect of German victims on victim blaming, mediated entirely via perceived similarity to victims. However, this relationship is only significant when the nationality of the perpetrators is not disclosed and the recipients are female. We discuss our results and implications for journalistic practice.