1. Actions, Factions, and Interactions: Newsworthy Influences on Supreme Court Coverage*.
- Author
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Johnson, Tyler and Socker, Erica
- Subjects
- *
COURTS in the press , *MASS media & judicial power , *MASS media & public opinion , *CONTENT analysis , *COURTS of last resort , *CONSTITUTIONAL courts , *GOVERNMENT & the press , *AMERICAN law , *HISTORY of American law , *ACTIONS & defenses (Law) - Abstract
Objectives We test whether Supreme Court media coverage (in terms of both overall volume and specific frames) is driven by Court actions, by factional battles on the Court, by the Court's interaction with other governmental actors, or by all three. Methods We link elements of the Spaeth Supreme Court Database and real-world Supreme Court and political events to Associated Press media coverage of the judicial branch over a nearly three-decade span. Content analysis of the media coverage is performed and empirical relationships between decisions, events, and coverage are analyzed using error correction modeling. Results We find that overall coverage of the Court is driven by the ideological nature of decisions rendered and by judicial retirements. Legal coverage of the Court is driven by issues of constitutionality. Political coverage of the Court is driven by majority size and judicial retirements. Conclusions The findings speak to the newsworthiness of Court action, factional battles on the Court, and moments where the Court interacts with outsiders. Elements of all three shapes the types of stories journalists tell and the ways in which said stories are told. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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