The Relationship between Media and Political Agendas: Variations across Decision-Making Phases

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Series Details Volume 36, Number 5, Pages 897-918
Publication Date September 2013
ISSN 0140-2382
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Abstract:

Previous studies have demonstrated that the extent to which media coverage influences the issue priorities of policy makers is contingent on the type of issue, media, and political agenda. This article contends that the relationship between media and political agendas varies across the phases of the decision-making process.

Based on a comprehensive dataset on issue attention in media coverage and various policy-making channels covering the years 1996–2003, the article analyses the level of media coverage and, more importantly, the distribution and correspondence of issue attention between media and political agendas across the four successive phases of the decision-making process (initiation, preparatory, parliamentary, and referendum phases) in Switzerland. Despite inversely distributed levels of attention for successive decision-making phases, both media and political agendas are concentrated on fewer issues in the initiation and referendum phases, and they are more strongly correlated in the most decisive stages of the process, that is, the preparatory and referendum phases.

Source Link https://doi.org/10.1080/01402382.2013.799312
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