News and Events => Political and Legal News => Topic started by: Jessica_Rose on June 23, 2026, 02:19:53 PM Return to Full Version
Title: The New York Times helped turn trans rights into political controversy...
Post by: Jessica_Rose on June 23, 2026, 02:19:53 PM
Post by: Jessica_Rose on June 23, 2026, 02:19:53 PM
The New York Times helped turn trans rights into political controversy, analysis finds
https://www.advocate.com/politics/national/new-york-times-transgender-controversy
Christopher Wiggins (23 June 2026)
A new data investigation argues that The New York Times sharply changed the way it covers transgender people beginning in 2022, moving from rights-based framing toward more skeptical, conflict-driven coverage that elevated opponents of transgender rights and gave less prominence to transgender people themselves.
The analysis, published Friday by civil rights attorney Alejandra Caraballo in The Dissident, reviewed 3,242 Times articles published between 2014 and early 2026. Caraballo also published an accompanying data site, where readers can review the findings and methodology.
"This isn't about any individual story," Caraballo, who said the project took her two months to complete, told The Advocate in an interview Monday. "This is about the whole corpus of how they've covered trans issues over time."
Caraballo, a clinical instructor at Harvard Law School's Cyberlaw Clinic, said she undertook the project because years of criticism from transgender writers, journalists, and advocacy groups had often been met by the Times with defenses of individual stories. The problem, she said, was not always factual error, but the cumulative effect of framing, story selection, and prominence.
"It is harder on the individual level because there isn't anything usually factually wrong with their stories," Caraballo said. "But part of the problem is the framing, what they choose to highlight, and how much priority they give certain stories."
https://www.advocate.com/politics/national/new-york-times-transgender-controversy
Christopher Wiggins (23 June 2026)
A new data investigation argues that The New York Times sharply changed the way it covers transgender people beginning in 2022, moving from rights-based framing toward more skeptical, conflict-driven coverage that elevated opponents of transgender rights and gave less prominence to transgender people themselves.
The analysis, published Friday by civil rights attorney Alejandra Caraballo in The Dissident, reviewed 3,242 Times articles published between 2014 and early 2026. Caraballo also published an accompanying data site, where readers can review the findings and methodology.
"This isn't about any individual story," Caraballo, who said the project took her two months to complete, told The Advocate in an interview Monday. "This is about the whole corpus of how they've covered trans issues over time."
Caraballo, a clinical instructor at Harvard Law School's Cyberlaw Clinic, said she undertook the project because years of criticism from transgender writers, journalists, and advocacy groups had often been met by the Times with defenses of individual stories. The problem, she said, was not always factual error, but the cumulative effect of framing, story selection, and prominence.
"It is harder on the individual level because there isn't anything usually factually wrong with their stories," Caraballo said. "But part of the problem is the framing, what they choose to highlight, and how much priority they give certain stories."