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February 16, 2010. The Media and Public Opinion. Announcements. Office hours, Thursdays 1:00-3:00pm Amory 232A. No appointment is necessary. Slides from last week will be posted. Review on Media Coverage. Media a source of information about politics Concerns about what the media cover
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February 16, 2010 The Media and Public Opinion
Announcements • Office hours, Thursdays 1:00-3:00pm Amory 232A. No appointment is necessary. • Slides from last week will be posted.
Review on Media Coverage • Media a source of information about politics • Concerns about what the media cover • Quality of coverage • Private vs. public • Tone of coverage
Public vs. Private broadcasting • The most respected news sources in many countries are the public radio and television news services (ie. BBC) • News is a profit making enterprise • Public broadcasting allows a broader range of news to be covered more in depth • But should the government regulate media coverage? • Criticisms of the BBC; ie. should it have invited Nick Griffin of the BNP on Question Time?
Unmediated Coverage • One of the most visible examples of parliament at work is the 30 minutes devoted each week to Prime Minister’s Questions • It is one of the few points where - between elections - the legislature can act as a check upon the executive in a visible forum. • Does PMQs enhance or weaken democracy? • Stealth Democracy • Would it be better if people did not see politics in action?
Media Effects • Categories of effects: • Cognitive processes; making sense of politics • Opinion on issues • Make choices between candidates • Processes: • Agenda Setting • Priming • Framing • Persuasion
Definitions • Agenda Setting – influence on what people think is most important problem • Priming – make respondents recall particular issues when evaluating leaders/issues • Framing – emphasis on particular aspects of a story (remember example about question wording) • Persuasion – convert respondent’s position on a particular issue/leader
Agenda Setting • Media can drive not “what to think” but “what to think about” • Transmission of salience • Citizens develop ideas about what is and is not important, which problems are and which are not proper subjects for government action, and these ideas shape and constrain what government attempts to do • Concerned with salience and not tone/direction
Agenda Setting Priority given to an issue by media Perceived importance
Agenda Setting Priority given to an issue by media Perceived importance Personal experience Source
Priming • The more attention the news media pay to a particular aspect of political life – the more frequently that aspect is primed – the more people will incorporate what they know about it into their political evaluations
Priming Attention given to an issue by media Prominence in evaluations
Priming Attention given to an issue by media Prominence in evaluations Change in importance Trust in source Prior knowledge
Framing • “A frame operates to select and highlight some features of reality and obscure others in a way that tells a consistent story about problems, their causes, moral implications, and remedies” (Entman 1996)
Framing • Frames organize (or reorganize) information that citizens already have in mind • Frames suggest how policies should be thought about • Frames imply what if anything should be done • In campaigns, frames are used to interpret actions of candidates
Example of Framing on the Environment • Global warming • Climate change • Climate crisis
Framing: The Horton Menace • Journalists ignored the facts about furlough programs in adopting strategy frame • Adopted the language of the Bush campaign • Failed to check facts that seemed compatible with their narrative
Framing: Coverage of the 2000 Election and its Aftermath • Possible frames • Gore won the popular vote • Bush ahead in FL, meaning that he had won the electoral college
Coverage of the 2000 Election and its Aftermath • Frames that weakened the Democratic position • Chaos frame • Recount frame • Bush challenge in other states • Military ballots frame • Later reinforced notion that Bush the winner
Framing: The Recession Is the dominant media frame a global recession or A recession for which Gordon Brown/Labour bear a large responsibility?