|
This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005. If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author directly. If you have questions about the archives, email rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, send email to [log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the body (drop the "").
(Feb 2006) Thank you. Elliott Parker ====================================================================
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate Mass Communication and Society Division
Jacob Groshek Graduate Student School of Journalism Indiana University 704 W. 4th St. Bloomington, IN 47401
[log in to unmask] 812-333-9718
Submitted for possible presentation to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication national conference, August 2005 and for consideration in the Leslie J. Moeller Award competition.
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate 9
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate In a January 2003 Knight Ridder poll, 66% of respondents reported a "good understanding" of the reasons for and against going to war in Iraq (Berman, 2003). The same poll, however, revealed that a large proportion of people surveyed incorrectly understood several crucial justifications for the pending war. These included the involvement of Iraq and Saddam Hussein in the September 11 attacks and proof of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Similar polls, including one conducted by the Pew Research Center, corroborated public opinion of the time (Berman, 2003; Kull, Ramsey, & Lewis, 2003). Media critic and author Michael Massing attributed the lack of accurate public understanding regarding the Iraq War to ineffective and overly sympathetic news reporting (2004). "With many analysts prepared to discuss the competing claims over the intelligence on Iraq, the press was in a good position to educate the public on the administration's justifications for war. Yet for the most part, it never did so" (Massing, 2004, p. 9). Physicist and former weapons inspector David Albright agreed, stating that "the administration was setting the agenda for what stories should be covered, and the news media bought into that, rather than take a critical look at the administration's underlying reasons for war" (cited in Massing, 2004, p. 10). Other, similar post-hoc criticisms of "the cheerleading and passivity of the coverage before and during the war" (Seib, 2004, p. 156) have emerged recently. This study seeks to examine the news coverage of the pre-Iraq War debate, specifically how the debate and opposition or support for the war were framed. In doing so, this study attempts to determine if news coverage of the pre-war period had the capacity to engender citizens' understanding of the pros and cons of the war and thereby act as an effective agent of democracy. The Proportion and Shape of Coverage Entman and Page (1994) wrote that "reporting that circulates information and opinion at odds with the administration is vital to the possibility of democracy in foreign policy" (p. 83). There have been numerous scholarly studies that have examined the degree to which the media are critical of the administration (see Althaus, Edy, Entman, & Phalen, 1996; Bennett, 1990; Herman & Chomsky, 1988; Mermin, 1999; Zaller & Chiu, 1996). These studies have concluded that media coverage, specifically of foreign affairs, has limited independence from the government and journalists act as "passive 'chroniclers' rather than active 'examiners'" (Dorman & Livingston, 1994, p. 76). The erosion of a confrontational media similarly reduces the basis for citizens to participate in the deliberation of foreign policy or to consider alternatives. As Graber (2002) wrote, "Judged in terms of the information needs of the ideal citizen in the ideal democracy, the end product of the gatekeeping process is inadequate" (p. 131). Mermin (1999) reported low levels of critical coverage surfacing in press coverage over several U.S.-initiated military campaigns. His findings were generally consistent, albeit more extreme, with those of Zaller and Chiu (1996) and Entman and Page (1994). Regarding coverage of the pre-Iraq War debate, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote, "U.S. media outlets–operating in an environment in which anyone who questions the administration's foreign policy is accused of being unpatriotic–have taken it as their assignment to sell the war, not to present a mix of information that might call the justification for war into question" (cited in Seib, 2004, p. 79). When considering this assessment and previous research, Hypothesis 1 predicts that a "journalism of deference to the national security state" (Dorman & Livingston, 1994, p. 76) will continue. H1: There will be more nonoppositional coverage (N) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq than oppositional coverage (O). (N > O, p < .05). Implications and Types of News Frames Thus far, this study has addressed the volume of opposition in media coverage during the pre-Iraq War debate. While the previously posed hypothesis examined a key aspect of debate coverage, it fails to capture how the debate was framed by the media. Framing is an important interpretive process of selecting and highlighting some features of reality and obscuring others while promoting "a particular interpretation, evaluation, and/or solution" (Entman, 2003, emphasis in original) in news coverage. Framing is how the media define and give meaning to issues and connect them to a larger environment (Callaghan & Schnell, 2001). The question at the heart of the issue of news frames is not merely what information coverage provides, but how interpretative frames structure understanding of an issue. The months leading up to the start of the Iraq War saw large amounts of media coverage devoted to the potential war. In doing so, the media adopted particular frames and explanations to report on the looming prospect of war. Such explanations often originate with either hawks or doves, and the media generally follow these cues when reporting stories (Sigal, 1973). Through framing, news coverage may magnify or shrink elements to make them more or less publicly salient (Entman, 1991). "By providing, repeating, and thereby reinforcing words and visual images that reference some ideas but not others, frames work to make some ideas more salient in the text, others less so – and others entirely invisible" (Entman, 1991, p. 7). Through consistency in news frames, a story often assumes a dominant interpretation of events and issues. This dominant frame will be "more readily discernible, comprehensible, and memorable than others" (Entman, 1991, p. 7). Similarly, this dominant frame has the potential to preclude other frames and views from emerging or being considered legitimate. Alternative viewpoints may be minimized or negated in the construction of one dominant news frame that emerges in media coverage. Most news frames can be broken down into one of two major categories: strategy frames or substance frames (Nacos, Shapiro, & Isernia, 2000). Strategy frames report stories from a competitive standpoint, in terms of winners and losers. Substance frames focus on the issue based on its own merits. This lexicon is similar in scope to episodic or thematic (Iyengar & Simon, 1994) frames. Strategy frames have qualities that resemble episodic frames, whereas substantive frames are more closely aligned to thematic framing, which "places public issues in some general or abstract concept" (Iyengar & Simon, 1994, p. 171). For purposes of this study, the categorization outlined by Nacos, Shapiro, and Isernia (2000) was followed. In addition, this categorization could also capture the spirit of Iyengar and Simon's typology. Strategy frames tend to politicize an issue. These frames can be seen in coverage of the "horse-race," or "game-framing," of election-day polling coverage. Strategy frames emphasize political bickering and conflict between parties and are generally characterized by simplicity, emotions, and personality (Nacos, et. al., 2000). Strategy frames are closely related to procedural coverage, as described by Entman and Page (1994). Procedural frames focus on "the process and politics of decision-making" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 87). Strategy and procedural frames remain popular in the news media and with reporters. Substance frames focus on making known to the public important information on policy issues (Nacos et. al., 2000). Substance frames avoid the trap of politicizing coverage. This style of reporting does not look at issues or policy decisions as contests with winners and losers, but rather "concentrates on the debate of facts, issues, context, policies, and institutional policy issues" (Nacos et al., 2000). A substance-framed news story would look at the history, background, and goals of a policy and use that information to explain the issue. Iyengar and Simon (1994) noted that media coverage of debate surrounding the use of force is often political in nature. That is, the coverage focuses on the political day-to-day of the debate as well as the process of implementing the policy. Relatively little coverage is devoted to explaining policy options and alternatives, which is also consistent with the findings of Dorman and Livingston (1994). In the same manner, Hypothesis 2 tests the relative amounts of substance and strategy framed coverage. H2: Strategy coverage (St) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq will appear more frequently than substantive coverage (Su) of the Bush policy toward Iraq. (St > Su, p < .05). Framing Opposition and Support in Media Coverage To promote a further understanding of how the public could know the debate, the follow section examines how both opposition and support for the policy were framed. As previously discussed, substance frames are not necessarily simply explanations of issues; they also carry weight as value-laden judgments. "Substantive news frames perform at least two of the following basic functions in covering events, issues, and political actors: defining effects or conditions as problematic, identifying causes, conveying a moral judgment of those involved in the framed matter, endorsing remedies or improvements to the problematic situation" (Entman, 2003, p. 417) Therefore, substantive frames impart a larger platform for understanding than strategy frames. Undoubtedly, the winning and losing of political debates and policy decisions is a crucial part of the American political process. "Democratic politics is at heart a strategic contest for power" (Mermin, 1999, p. 27). However, the news media should not "encourage citizens to experience politics in these terms" (Mermin, 1999, p. 27). Likewise, Cappella and Jamieson (1997) found that strategy-framed coverage promoted cynicism among the American public towards the political process and actors. Despite the shortcomings of strategy framing, it remains a widespread practice in news reporting. Specifically, when covering debate or conflict over an issue, journalists can quickly cover and simplify the story by using a strategy frame rather than opting for the deeper, contextualized substantive frame. Alternatively, when making its case for policy, the administration often lay bare the goals, merits, and justifications of its policy. Since the administration and proponents of the policy essentially "spell out" the policy and its justifications and benefits, journalists are apt to frame supportive (or nonoppositional) material in a substantive manner. This subjective experience and interpretation of news coverage led to Hypotheses 3 and 4. H3: Oppositional coverage (O) will be framed more frequently with strategy frames (OSt) than substantive frames (OSu). (OSt > OSu, p< .05). H4: Nonoppositional coverage (N) will be framed more frequently with substantive frames (NSu) than strategy frames (NSt). (NSu > NSt, p < .05). Method To test the hypotheses, a content analysis of coverage in the New York Times and Washington Post was conducted. These papers were selected because they have "large foreign news staffs, high prestige and sophistication, and a proven record of willingness to take on the government" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 84). Additionally, these two papers are "often regarded as the two leading newspapers in the country" (Dorman & Livingston, 1994, p. 69). As such, these newspapers are the leading intermedia agenda setting outlets (Weaver, McCombs, & Shaw, 2004). What these papers consider important and how they handle the issue is likely to be duplicated across other media outlets. Therefore, these newspapers can be considered generally representative of the mediated public sphere (Bennett et al., 2004) and this study predictive of mainstream media coverage at large. The timeframe for the analysis ran from two weeks before Congress passed the resolution on October 11, 2002, which authorized President Bush to use military force in Iraq to two weeks after the vote: from September 27 to October 25, 2002. This two-week period before and after the vote was chosen because it was "long enough for critical angles that might not have been immediately apparent to emerge" (Mermin, 1999, p. 42). Also, this timeframe can be considered representative of the most vigorous debate, specifically domestically. Articles from the "news section" of each newspaper comprised the sample of this study. The news section was defined as section A on weekdays and section 1 on weekend editions. This study focused on coverage understood by the public to be unbiased, objective news and purported to be so by news organizations. The sample therefore did not include editorials, letters, and opinion pieces because they are not held to the same notions of objectivity. Furthermore, editorials were excluded on the basis they are not as widely read. Bogart (1981) reported editorial readership at only 25%, compared to 53% of news readers who start reading with the front page. Bogart also wrote that nine in ten readers claimed to open the general news section. "News analysis" pieces were included because they appear in the news section and are presented as objective analyses of issues and events. Several key aspects defined the Bush administration's policy towards Iraq: Forcing the immediate disarmament of Iraq, using military force if necessary, and acting unilaterally if necessary. This was the platform of the Bush administration in its attempts to build domestic and international support from the outset. While the administration may have made some concessions or emphasized some issues in order to gain support for this policy, it remained fundamentally the same in the timeframe studied. Articles that focused on the administration's policy towards Iraq were selected for study. These articles centered on at least one of three topics: First, international or domestic commentary, support, or opposition of the policy; second, U.N. inspections of Iraqi weapons; third, coalition building for the policy, either international or domestic. Selected articles included information either about the policy or the process of implementing the policy both domestically and internationally. The sample did not include articles that peripherally mentioned the Bush policy. Also excluded were articles that discussed the Bush policy towards Iraq primarily as being only a minor issue for political elections, foreign or domestic. Other excluded articles focused on business or economic issues and only mentioned the Bush policy towards Iraq as a corollary. The unit of analysis was a paragraph of text. Photographs and cutlines that appeared with photos were also coded using the same rules as paragraphs. Photographs featured independently of an article were treated as a separate article, coded in the same manner as other items of analysis. The framing impact of visuals is considerable, and this study attempted to incorporate their effect. Charts, graphs, and any images other than photographs were not included in this study due to their complexity and infrequent appearance with news stories. The headline and first ten paragraphs of each article were coded. Ten was chosen for the number of paragraphs because most articles in the Times and Post are between fifteen and thirty paragraphs long (Mermin, 1999). Because of the typical inverted pyramid style of reporting, the tone of the article was well established in the first ten paragraphs. As such, information regarded as the most important appears in the first ten paragraphs, and the information buried further in the story carries less weight. Similarly, any alternative viewpoints expressed in the first ten paragraphs are considered more important. These paragraphs are also more crucial to the framing of the story than paragraphs at or near the end of the article or after a page jump, where readership has been shown to drop (Bogart, 1981). Oppositional and Nonoppositional Codes To test Hypothesis 1, each paragraph was coded as being either "oppositional" or "nonoppositional" toward President Bush's policy. Nonoppositional coverage included both "neutral" and "supportive" categories, which were not used to avoid ambiguity (Mermin, 1999). Paragraphs that clearly articulated criticism or indicated opposition to President Bush's policy or questioned official justification were coded as oppositional. The measure of the oppositional frame was determined from a closed-ended "yes/no" option with two categories measuring criticism of President Bush's policy and opposition to President Bush's policy. The categories were: first, was criticism of President Bush's policy present in the paragraph and second, was opposition to President Bush's policy present in the paragraph. If the "no" option was recorded for both categories, the paragraph was coded as nonoppositional. If the "yes" option was recorded for either category, the paragraph was coded as oppositional. Oppositional coverage included any mention of debate surrounding the policy, as the debate itself was an indication of opposition to the policy. Oppositional coverage may have appeared as opposition or criticism to any of the "core" assumptions of the Bush policy. These core assumptions included: Iraq should be disarmed, the Iraq regime should change, Iraq presents a threat to the United States, military engagement is acceptable, unilateral action by the United States is acceptable, and action to disarm Iraq must be taken immediately. Paragraphs that predicted or suggested failures or negative side effects of the policy were coded as oppositional. Paragraphs that mentioned opposition as semantic disagreements, such as the number of UN Security Council resolutions, were also coded as oppositional. Photographs that portrayed anti-war demonstrations were coded as oppositional. Paragraphs that simply described the policy or its goals were coded as nonoppositional. Nonoppositional paragraphs included all of the paragraphs that did not clearly express or indicate opposition or criticism to the Bush policy towards Iraq. Criticisms outside the scope of the policy towards Iraq, such as criticisms of Bush's competence, were coded as nonoppositional. Photographs that showed politicians speaking, shaking hands, and so forth were coded as nonoppositional. Substantive and Strategy Codes To examine Hypotheses 2, 3, and 4, paragraphs were coded in terms of substance and strategy. These paragraphs were differentiated on the basis of the following yes/no categorization: paragraphs that describe why this policy is being implemented were coded as substantive paragraphs; paragraphs that described the process of the policy being implemented were coded as strategy paragraphs. Substantive paragraphs were concerned with answering why the policy is or is not desirable. Substantive paragraphs included descriptions of the policy, merits of the policy, goals of the policy, and the implications or impacts of the policy (Lawrence, 2000). Substantive paragraphs were recognized by their focus on the policy. Substantive coverage addressed the core assumptions of the policy: Iraq should be disarmed, the Iraq regime should change, Iraq presents a threat to the United States, military engagement is acceptable, unilateral action by the United States is acceptable, and action to disarm Iraq must be taken immediately. Any paragraph that discussed these core assumptions was considered substantive. Strategy paragraphs covered information on the "process and politics of decision making" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 87) such as President Bush's attempts to build a coalition and sway Congressional and public opinion. Strategy paragraphs described how the policy is or is not being implemented. Paragraphs that described debate between international or domestic parties on policy issues were coded as strategy paragraphs, as this was considered a function of the political process of implementing the policy. Strategy paragraphs included evaluations of President Bush's competence, leadership, and ability. Paragraphs that discussed, but did not definitively predict the outcome of the policy as a success or failure were coded as strategy paragraphs (see Mermin, 1999). Strategy paragraphs were not concerned with the core assumptions of the policy, but rather issues that surrounded the policy, including: political alliances for the policy, public, elite, and foreign opinion, political motives of the policy, competence of Bush, political implications of the policy, winning or losing policy debate, and the success or possible, not predicted, failure of the policy. Coders and Reliability The author coded all of the articles that met the selection criteria. For reliability purposes, approximately one-quarter of the selected articles were also coded by two coders trained in the definitions of the categories and data input. Each coder independently coded the same one-quarter of the articles, selected at random. The reliability scores were tested between the author and the two coders using Cohen's Kappa. "Oppositional or nonoppositional coverage" agreement earned a score of 0.85. "Substantive or strategy coverage" agreement produced a score of 0.73. These agreement scores, which controlled for chance, are generally considered acceptable (Frey, Botan, & Kreps, 2000). Results A total of 202 articles, which included 2442 units of analysis, were coded. One hundred and ten articles appeared in the New York Times and 92 in the Washington Post. Of the 202 articles, 161 included at least one paragraph with oppositional coverage. All units were coded in terms of oppositional or nonoppositional as well as substantive or strategy frames. The first hypothesis predicted that there will be more nonoppositional coverage (N) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq than oppositional coverage (O). (N > O, p < .05). This hypothesis was supported, with 793 (32%) paragraphs coded as oppositional compared to 1,649 (68%) paragraphs coded as nonoppositional. A difference of proportions test revealed a statistically significant difference: Z = 12.6, p<.001. It can therefore be concluded that opposition to policy was less frequent than neutral and supportive coverage, lending evidence to the suggestion that "Most investigative energy was directed at stories that supported, rather than challenged, the administration's case" (Massing, 2004, p. 9). Hypothesis 2 predicted that strategy coverage (St) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq will appear more frequently than substantive coverage (Su) of the Bush policy toward Iraq. (St > Su, p < .05). This hypothesis was supported. A total of 564 (23%) paragraphs were coded as framing the policy in a substantive manner whereas 1,878 (77%) paragraphs were coded as framing the policy as a strategy issue. A difference of proportions test was run to examine this data. This test yielded a Z-score of 28.6, which indicates that the difference between these two groups was not due to chance. Written using statistical indicia, Z = 28.6, p <.001. Thus, it can be concluded that the pre-Iraq war debate presented in the two newspapers under investigation overwhelming framed it as a matter of process and politics, not substance. Hypothesis 3 predicted that oppositional coverage (O) will be framed more frequently with strategy frames (OSt) than substantive frames (OSu). (OSt > OSu, p< .05). This hypothesis was analyzed using a t-test. There was a significant effect for frames, t(200) = 8.18, p < .001, with strategy frames appearing more frequently than substantive frames. The mean number of substantive-framed paragraphs was 0.96 per article, compared to 2.95 strategy-framed paragraphs per article. Opposition was dominantly framed as a matter of process and politics, rather than a merit-based evaluation of the policy itself. This evidence suggests media coverage did not provide citizens a "foundation for continued opposition" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 90). Hypothesis 4 predicted that nonoppositional coverage (N) will be framed more frequently with substantive frames (NSu) than strategy frames (NSt). (NSu > NSt, p < .05). This hypothesis was also analyzed using a t-test. There was a significant effect for frames in this category as well, however not in the direction predicted, t(200) = 8.57, p < .001. Strategy frames dominated again, with an average of 6.35 per article, compared to 1.83 substantive-framed nonoppositional paragraphs per article. This can best be explained as a response to the largely strategy-framed opposition. With a dearth of substantive criticisms, little effort was made by the administration and the press to balance these criticisms. These findings suggest that supportive and neutral (nonoppositional) coverage was framed in direct proportion to the framing of oppositional coverage. Although this hypothesis was not supported, it reveals a significant relationship in the practice of framing nonoppositional articles. Even neutral or supportive coverage was framed in a manner of process and politics, which suggests the media gave relatively little basis for citizens to understand the policy itself, and focused on how the policy was going to be decided upon and implemented. The relationship between oppositional and nonoppositional coverage and its framing can be seen in Figure 1. -- Insert Figure 1 about here -- Conclusion As expected, oppositional coverage was overwhelmed by nonoppositional coverage (by a margin of approximately 1 to 2). This provides evidence of media coverage as more closely following, and cultivating support for administration claims (Dorman & Livingston, 1994; Entman & Page, 1994; Massing, 2004; Seib, 2004). The relatively minimal oppositional coverage may also have been evidence of the political culture of the time. Indeed, many readers "were intolerant of articles critical of the president" and "Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, and The Weekly Standard, among others, all stood ready to pounce on journalists who strayed, branding them as liberals or traitors – labels that could permanently damage a career" (Massing, 2004, p. 10). The results of this study suggest that pre-Iraq War debate was presented more as a matter of procedure and politics rather than a description or analysis of policy. Strategy frames were overwhelmingly dominant. Explanations, goals, and merits of the policy were not evaluated in a significant manner when compared to the amount of coverage concerned with who was winning or losing the debate and how the policy would be implemented. The dominance of strategy-framed coverage implies that the complexities and relevant background information of the policy were not reinforced and made as salient in media coverage as other political matters. While it is impossible from this study to measure what the public knew about President Bush's policy, the kind of information presented about the policy is clearly not focused on describing and evaluating the policy. It can be inferred that if since this information was lacking, the public became familiar with the policy in a procedural and political manner. In a synthesis of coverage type and its framing, oppositional and nonoppositional coverage was combined with substantive and strategy framing. Each paragraph assumed one of four categories: oppositional/substantive, oppositional/strategy, nonoppositional/substantive, and nonoppositional/strategy. Over the course of the entire study, the most infrequent type of coverage was oppositional/substantive. The dominant type of coverage was nonoppositional/strategy. This provides some evidence that the media failed to provide citizens with a means for both understanding and participating in policy debate, because the majority of coverage was supportive and uncritical of the policy and framed it in a strategic manner unlikely to evaluate the policy. This correlates with previous research, such as that by Entman and Page (1994) who wrote, "Procedural reproaches, even if decoded by the mass audience as disguised attacks on the policy itself, provide the public little cognitive basis for participating in deliberation" (p. 90). These results also align with similar, major studies in this field (Bennett, 1990; Dorman & Livingston, 1994; Mermin, 1999). Shortly after the Iraq War began, Berman wrote that "when the war dies down, editors and media analysts should catch their breath and ask themselves: How much did press coverage (or lack of coverage) contribute to the public backing for a pre-emptive invasion without the support of the United Nations?" (2003, p. 2). The results of this study suggest the answer to that question is that the media played a central role in failing to properly inform citizens and cultivate public deliberation on crucial policy matters.
References: Althaus, S., Edy, J., Entman, R., & Phalen, P. (1996). Revising the Indexing Hypothesis: Officials, Media, and the Libya Crisis. Political Communication, 13, 407-421. Bennett, W. L. (1990). Toward a Theory of Press-State Relations in the United States. Journal of Communication, 40 (2), 103-125. Bennett, W. L., & Paletz, D. (Eds.). (1994). Taken By Storm. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Bennett, W., Pickard, V., Iozzi, D., Schroeder, C., Lagos, T., & Caswell, C. (2004). Managing the Public Sphere: Journalistic Construction of the Great Globalization Debate. Journal of Communication, 54 (3), 437-455. Berman, A. (2003). Polls Suggest Failure in Pre-War Coverage. Editor and Publisher. Retrieved March 5, 2005, from Editor and Publisher database http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/ article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1848576. Bogart, L. (1981). Press and Public: Who Reads What, When, Where, and Why in American Newspapers. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Callaghan, K., & Schnell, F. (2001). Assessing the Democratic Debate: How the News Media Frame Elite Policy Discourse. Political Communication, 18, 183-212. Dorman, W., & Livingston, S. (1994). News and Historical Content: The Establishing Phase of the Persian Gulf Policy Debate. In W. L. Bennett, & D. Paletz (Eds.), Taken By Storm (pp. 63-81). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Entman, R. (1991). Framing U.S. Coverage of International News: Contrasts in Narratives of the KAL and Iran Air Incidents. Journal of Communication, 41 (4), 6-26. Entman, R., & Page, B. (1994). The News Before the Storm: The Iraq War Debate and the Limits to Media Independence. In W. L. Bennett, & D. Paletz (Eds.), Taken By Storm (pp. 82-104). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Entman, R. (2003). Cascading Activation: Contesting the White House's Frame After 9/11. Political Communication, 20, 415-432. Frey, L., Botan, C., Kreps, G. (2000). Investigating Communication: An Introduction to Research Methods (2nd ed.). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon. Graber, D. (2002). Mass Media & American Politics. Washington, DC: CQ Press. Herman, E., & Chomsky, N. (1988). Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media. New York, NY: Pantheon Books. Iyengar, S., & Simon, A. (1994). News Coverage of the Gulf Crisis and Public Opinion. In Bennett, W. L., & Paletz, D. (Eds.), Taken By Storm (pp. 167-187). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Jamieson, K. H., & Cappella, J. N. (1997). Spiral of Cynicism. New York: Oxford University Press. Kull, S., Ramsay, C., & Lewis, E. (2003). Misperception, the Media, and the Iraq War. Political Science Quarterly, 118, (4), 569-598. Lawrence, R. (2000). Game-Framing the Issues: Tracking the Strategy Frame in Public Policy News. Political Communication, 17, 93-114.
Massing, M. (2004). Now They Tell Us. Retrieved March 5, 2005, from http://www.williambowles.info/media/massing_media.html. Mermin, J. (1999). Debating War and Peace. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Nacos, B., Shapiro, R., Hritzuk, N., & Chadwick, B. (2000). New Issues and the Media: American and German News Coverage of the Global-Warming Debate. In Nacos, B., Shapiro, R., & Pierangelo, I. (Eds.), Decision Making in a Glass House (pp. 41-60). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Nacos, B., Shapiro, R., & Pierangelo, I. (Eds.). (2000). Decision Making in a Glass House. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Seib, P. (2004). Beyond the Front Lines: How the News Media Cover a World Shaped by War. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Sigal, L. (1973). Reporters and Officials. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath and Company. Weaver, D., McCombs, M., & Shaw, D. (2004). Agenda-Setting Research: Issues, Attributes, and Influences. In Kaid, L. (Ed.), (2004) Political Communication Research. (pp. 257-282). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Zaller, J., & Chiu, D. (1996). Government's Little Helper: U.S. Press Coverage of Foreign Policy Crises, 1945-1991. Public Communication, 13, 385-405.
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate 9
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate In a January 2003 Knight Ridder poll, 66% of respondents reported a "good understanding" of the reasons for and against going to war in Iraq (Berman, 2003). The same poll, however, revealed that a large proportion of people surveyed incorrectly understood several crucial justifications for the pending war. These included the involvement of Iraq and Saddam Hussein in the September 11 attacks and proof of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Similar polls, including one conducted by the Pew Research Center, corroborated public opinion of the time (Berman, 2003; Kull, Ramsey, & Lewis, 2003). Media critic and author Michael Massing attributed the lack of accurate public understanding regarding the Iraq War to ineffective and overly sympathetic news reporting (2004). "With many analysts prepared to discuss the competing claims over the intelligence on Iraq, the press was in a good position to educate the public on the administration's justifications for war. Yet for the most part, it never did so" (Massing, 2004, p. 9). Physicist and former weapons inspector David Albright agreed, stating that "the administration was setting the agenda for what stories should be covered, and the news media bought into that, rather than take a critical look at the administration's underlying reasons for war" (cited in Massing, 2004, p. 10). Other, similar post-hoc criticisms of "the cheerleading and passivity of the coverage before and during the war" (Seib, 2004, p. 156) have emerged recently. This study seeks to examine the news coverage of the pre-Iraq War debate, specifically how the debate and opposition or support for the war were framed. In doing so, this study attempts to determine if news coverage of the pre-war period had the capacity to engender citizens' understanding of the pros and cons of the war and thereby act as an effective agent of democracy. The Proportion and Shape of Coverage Entman and Page (1994) wrote that "reporting that circulates information and opinion at odds with the administration is vital to the possibility of democracy in foreign policy" (p. 83). There have been numerous scholarly studies that have examined the degree to which the media are critical of the administration (see Althaus, Edy, Entman, & Phalen, 1996; Bennett, 1990; Herman & Chomsky, 1988; Mermin, 1999; Zaller & Chiu, 1996). These studies have concluded that media coverage, specifically of foreign affairs, has limited independence from the government and journalists act as "passive 'chroniclers' rather than active 'examiners'" (Dorman & Livingston, 1994, p. 76). The erosion of a confrontational media similarly reduces the basis for citizens to participate in the deliberation of foreign policy or to consider alternatives. As Graber (2002) wrote, "Judged in terms of the information needs of the ideal citizen in the ideal democracy, the end product of the gatekeeping process is inadequate" (p. 131). Mermin (1999) reported low levels of critical coverage surfacing in press coverage over several U.S.-initiated military campaigns. His findings were generally consistent, albeit more extreme, with those of Zaller and Chiu (1996) and Entman and Page (1994). Regarding coverage of the pre-Iraq War debate, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote, "U.S. media outlets–operating in an environment in which anyone who questions the administration's foreign policy is accused of being unpatriotic–have taken it as their assignment to sell the war, not to present a mix of information that might call the justification for war into question" (cited in Seib, 2004, p. 79). When considering this assessment and previous research, Hypothesis 1 predicts that a "journalism of deference to the national security state" (Dorman & Livingston, 1994, p. 76) will continue. H1: There will be more nonoppositional coverage (N) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq than oppositional coverage (O). (N > O, p < .05). Implications and Types of News Frames Thus far, this study has addressed the volume of opposition in media coverage during the pre-Iraq War debate. While the previously posed hypothesis examined a key aspect of debate coverage, it fails to capture how the debate was framed by the media. Framing is an important interpretive process of selecting and highlighting some features of reality and obscuring others while promoting "a particular interpretation, evaluation, and/or solution" (Entman, 2003, emphasis in original) in news coverage. Framing is how the media define and give meaning to issues and connect them to a larger environment (Callaghan & Schnell, 2001). The question at the heart of the issue of news frames is not merely what information coverage provides, but how interpretative frames structure understanding of an issue. The months leading up to the start of the Iraq War saw large amounts of media coverage devoted to the potential war. In doing so, the media adopted particular frames and explanations to report on the looming prospect of war. Such explanations often originate with either hawks or doves, and the media generally follow these cues when reporting stories (Sigal, 1973). Through framing, news coverage may magnify or shrink elements to make them more or less publicly salient (Entman, 1991). "By providing, repeating, and thereby reinforcing words and visual images that reference some ideas but not others, frames work to make some ideas more salient in the text, others less so – and others entirely invisible" (Entman, 1991, p. 7). Through consistency in news frames, a story often assumes a dominant interpretation of events and issues. This dominant frame will be "more readily discernible, comprehensible, and memorable than others" (Entman, 1991, p. 7). Similarly, this dominant frame has the potential to preclude other frames and views from emerging or being considered legitimate. Alternative viewpoints may be minimized or negated in the construction of one dominant news frame that emerges in media coverage. Most news frames can be broken down into one of two major categories: strategy frames or substance frames (Nacos, Shapiro, & Isernia, 2000). Strategy frames report stories from a competitive standpoint, in terms of winners and losers. Substance frames focus on the issue based on its own merits. This lexicon is similar in scope to episodic or thematic (Iyengar & Simon, 1994) frames. Strategy frames have qualities that resemble episodic frames, whereas substantive frames are more closely aligned to thematic framing, which "places public issues in some general or abstract concept" (Iyengar & Simon, 1994, p. 171). For purposes of this study, the categorization outlined by Nacos, Shapiro, and Isernia (2000) was followed. In addition, this categorization could also capture the spirit of Iyengar and Simon's typology. Strategy frames tend to politicize an issue. These frames can be seen in coverage of the "horse-race," or "game-framing," of election-day polling coverage. Strategy frames emphasize political bickering and conflict between parties and are generally characterized by simplicity, emotions, and personality (Nacos, et. al., 2000). Strategy frames are closely related to procedural coverage, as described by Entman and Page (1994). Procedural frames focus on "the process and politics of decision-making" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 87). Strategy and procedural frames remain popular in the news media and with reporters. Substance frames focus on making known to the public important information on policy issues (Nacos et. al., 2000). Substance frames avoid the trap of politicizing coverage. This style of reporting does not look at issues or policy decisions as contests with winners and losers, but rather "concentrates on the debate of facts, issues, context, policies, and institutional policy issues" (Nacos et al., 2000). A substance-framed news story would look at the history, background, and goals of a policy and use that information to explain the issue. Iyengar and Simon (1994) noted that media coverage of debate surrounding the use of force is often political in nature. That is, the coverage focuses on the political day-to-day of the debate as well as the process of implementing the policy. Relatively little coverage is devoted to explaining policy options and alternatives, which is also consistent with the findings of Dorman and Livingston (1994). In the same manner, Hypothesis 2 tests the relative amounts of substance and strategy framed coverage. H2: Strategy coverage (St) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq will appear more frequently than substantive coverage (Su) of the Bush policy toward Iraq. (St > Su, p < .05). Framing Opposition and Support in Media Coverage To promote a further understanding of how the public could know the debate, the follow section examines how both opposition and support for the policy were framed. As previously discussed, substance frames are not necessarily simply explanations of issues; they also carry weight as value-laden judgments. "Substantive news frames perform at least two of the following basic functions in covering events, issues, and political actors: defining effects or conditions as problematic, identifying causes, conveying a moral judgment of those involved in the framed matter, endorsing remedies or improvements to the problematic situation" (Entman, 2003, p. 417) Therefore, substantive frames impart a larger platform for understanding than strategy frames. Undoubtedly, the winning and losing of political debates and policy decisions is a crucial part of the American political process. "Democratic politics is at heart a strategic contest for power" (Mermin, 1999, p. 27). However, the news media should not "encourage citizens to experience politics in these terms" (Mermin, 1999, p. 27). Likewise, Cappella and Jamieson (1997) found that strategy-framed coverage promoted cynicism among the American public towards the political process and actors. Despite the shortcomings of strategy framing, it remains a widespread practice in news reporting. Specifically, when covering debate or conflict over an issue, journalists can quickly cover and simplify the story by using a strategy frame rather than opting for the deeper, contextualized substantive frame. Alternatively, when making its case for policy, the administration often lay bare the goals, merits, and justifications of its policy. Since the administration and proponents of the policy essentially "spell out" the policy and its justifications and benefits, journalists are apt to frame supportive (or nonoppositional) material in a substantive manner. This subjective experience and interpretation of news coverage led to Hypotheses 3 and 4. H3: Oppositional coverage (O) will be framed more frequently with strategy frames (OSt) than substantive frames (OSu). (OSt > OSu, p< .05). H4: Nonoppositional coverage (N) will be framed more frequently with substantive frames (NSu) than strategy frames (NSt). (NSu > NSt, p < .05). Method To test the hypotheses, a content analysis of coverage in the New York Times and Washington Post was conducted. These papers were selected because they have "large foreign news staffs, high prestige and sophistication, and a proven record of willingness to take on the government" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 84). Additionally, these two papers are "often regarded as the two leading newspapers in the country" (Dorman & Livingston, 1994, p. 69). As such, these newspapers are the leading intermedia agenda setting outlets (Weaver, McCombs, & Shaw, 2004). What these papers consider important and how they handle the issue is likely to be duplicated across other media outlets. Therefore, these newspapers can be considered generally representative of the mediated public sphere (Bennett et al., 2004) and this study predictive of mainstream media coverage at large. The timeframe for the analysis ran from two weeks before Congress passed the resolution on October 11, 2002, which authorized President Bush to use military force in Iraq to two weeks after the vote: from September 27 to October 25, 2002. This two-week period before and after the vote was chosen because it was "long enough for critical angles that might not have been immediately apparent to emerge" (Mermin, 1999, p. 42). Also, this timeframe can be considered representative of the most vigorous debate, specifically domestically. Articles from the "news section" of each newspaper comprised the sample of this study. The news section was defined as section A on weekdays and section 1 on weekend editions. This study focused on coverage understood by the public to be unbiased, objective news and purported to be so by news organizations. The sample therefore did not include editorials, letters, and opinion pieces because they are not held to the same notions of objectivity. Furthermore, editorials were excluded on the basis they are not as widely read. Bogart (1981) reported editorial readership at only 25%, compared to 53% of news readers who start reading with the front page. Bogart also wrote that nine in ten readers claimed to open the general news section. "News analysis" pieces were included because they appear in the news section and are presented as objective analyses of issues and events. Several key aspects defined the Bush administration's policy towards Iraq: Forcing the immediate disarmament of Iraq, using military force if necessary, and acting unilaterally if necessary. This was the platform of the Bush administration in its attempts to build domestic and international support from the outset. While the administration may have made some concessions or emphasized some issues in order to gain support for this policy, it remained fundamentally the same in the timeframe studied. Articles that focused on the administration's policy towards Iraq were selected for study. These articles centered on at least one of three topics: First, international or domestic commentary, support, or opposition of the policy; second, U.N. inspections of Iraqi weapons; third, coalition building for the policy, either international or domestic. Selected articles included information either about the policy or the process of implementing the policy both domestically and internationally. The sample did not include articles that peripherally mentioned the Bush policy. Also excluded were articles that discussed the Bush policy towards Iraq primarily as being only a minor issue for political elections, foreign or domestic. Other excluded articles focused on business or economic issues and only mentioned the Bush policy towards Iraq as a corollary. The unit of analysis was a paragraph of text. Photographs and cutlines that appeared with photos were also coded using the same rules as paragraphs. Photographs featured independently of an article were treated as a separate article, coded in the same manner as other items of analysis. The framing impact of visuals is considerable, and this study attempted to incorporate their effect. Charts, graphs, and any images other than photographs were not included in this study due to their complexity and infrequent appearance with news stories. The headline and first ten paragraphs of each article were coded. Ten was chosen for the number of paragraphs because most articles in the Times and Post are between fifteen and thirty paragraphs long (Mermin, 1999). Because of the typical inverted pyramid style of reporting, the tone of the article was well established in the first ten paragraphs. As such, information regarded as the most important appears in the first ten paragraphs, and the information buried further in the story carries less weight. Similarly, any alternative viewpoints expressed in the first ten paragraphs are considered more important. These paragraphs are also more crucial to the framing of the story than paragraphs at or near the end of the article or after a page jump, where readership has been shown to drop (Bogart, 1981). Oppositional and Nonoppositional Codes To test Hypothesis 1, each paragraph was coded as being either "oppositional" or "nonoppositional" toward President Bush's policy. Nonoppositional coverage included both "neutral" and "supportive" categories, which were not used to avoid ambiguity (Mermin, 1999). Paragraphs that clearly articulated criticism or indicated opposition to President Bush's policy or questioned official justification were coded as oppositional. The measure of the oppositional frame was determined from a closed-ended "yes/no" option with two categories measuring criticism of President Bush's policy and opposition to President Bush's policy. The categories were: first, was criticism of President Bush's policy present in the paragraph and second, was opposition to President Bush's policy present in the paragraph. If the "no" option was recorded for both categories, the paragraph was coded as nonoppositional. If the "yes" option was recorded for either category, the paragraph was coded as oppositional. Oppositional coverage included any mention of debate surrounding the policy, as the debate itself was an indication of opposition to the policy. Oppositional coverage may have appeared as opposition or criticism to any of the "core" assumptions of the Bush policy. These core assumptions included: Iraq should be disarmed, the Iraq regime should change, Iraq presents a threat to the United States, military engagement is acceptable, unilateral action by the United States is acceptable, and action to disarm Iraq must be taken immediately. Paragraphs that predicted or suggested failures or negative side effects of the policy were coded as oppositional. Paragraphs that mentioned opposition as semantic disagreements, such as the number of UN Security Council resolutions, were also coded as oppositional. Photographs that portrayed anti-war demonstrations were coded as oppositional. Paragraphs that simply described the policy or its goals were coded as nonoppositional. Nonoppositional paragraphs included all of the paragraphs that did not clearly express or indicate opposition or criticism to the Bush policy towards Iraq. Criticisms outside the scope of the policy towards Iraq, such as criticisms of Bush's competence, were coded as nonoppositional. Photographs that showed politicians speaking, shaking hands, and so forth were coded as nonoppositional. Substantive and Strategy Codes To examine Hypotheses 2, 3, and 4, paragraphs were coded in terms of substance and strategy. These paragraphs were differentiated on the basis of the following yes/no categorization: paragraphs that describe why this policy is being implemented were coded as substantive paragraphs; paragraphs that described the process of the policy being implemented were coded as strategy paragraphs. Substantive paragraphs were concerned with answering why the policy is or is not desirable. Substantive paragraphs included descriptions of the policy, merits of the policy, goals of the policy, and the implications or impacts of the policy (Lawrence, 2000). Substantive paragraphs were recognized by their focus on the policy. Substantive coverage addressed the core assumptions of the policy: Iraq should be disarmed, the Iraq regime should change, Iraq presents a threat to the United States, military engagement is acceptable, unilateral action by the United States is acceptable, and action to disarm Iraq must be taken immediately. Any paragraph that discussed these core assumptions was considered substantive. Strategy paragraphs covered information on the "process and politics of decision making" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 87) such as President Bush's attempts to build a coalition and sway Congressional and public opinion. Strategy paragraphs described how the policy is or is not being implemented. Paragraphs that described debate between international or domestic parties on policy issues were coded as strategy paragraphs, as this was considered a function of the political process of implementing the policy. Strategy paragraphs included evaluations of President Bush's competence, leadership, and ability. Paragraphs that discussed, but did not definitively predict the outcome of the policy as a success or failure were coded as strategy paragraphs (see Mermin, 1999). Strategy paragraphs were not concerned with the core assumptions of the policy, but rather issues that surrounded the policy, including: political alliances for the policy, public, elite, and foreign opinion, political motives of the policy, competence of Bush, political implications of the policy, winning or losing policy debate, and the success or possible, not predicted, failure of the policy. Coders and Reliability The author coded all of the articles that met the selection criteria. For reliability purposes, approximately one-quarter of the selected articles were also coded by two coders trained in the definitions of the categories and data input. Each coder independently coded the same one-quarter of the articles, selected at random. The reliability scores were tested between the author and the two coders using Cohen's Kappa. "Oppositional or nonoppositional coverage" agreement earned a score of 0.85. "Substantive or strategy coverage" agreement produced a score of 0.73. These agreement scores, which controlled for chance, are generally considered acceptable (Frey, Botan, & Kreps, 2000). Results A total of 202 articles, which included 2442 units of analysis, were coded. One hundred and ten articles appeared in the New York Times and 92 in the Washington Post. Of the 202 articles, 161 included at least one paragraph with oppositional coverage. All units were coded in terms of oppositional or nonoppositional as well as substantive or strategy frames. The first hypothesis predicted that there will be more nonoppositional coverage (N) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq than oppositional coverage (O). (N > O, p < .05). This hypothesis was supported, with 793 (32%) paragraphs coded as oppositional compared to 1,649 (68%) paragraphs coded as nonoppositional. A difference of proportions test revealed a statistically significant difference: Z = 12.6, p<.001. It can therefore be concluded that opposition to policy was less frequent than neutral and supportive coverage, lending evidence to the suggestion that "Most investigative energy was directed at stories that supported, rather than challenged, the administration's case" (Massing, 2004, p. 9). Hypothesis 2 predicted that strategy coverage (St) of President Bush's policy toward Iraq will appear more frequently than substantive coverage (Su) of the Bush policy toward Iraq. (St > Su, p < .05). This hypothesis was supported. A total of 564 (23%) paragraphs were coded as framing the policy in a substantive manner whereas 1,878 (77%) paragraphs were coded as framing the policy as a strategy issue. A difference of proportions test was run to examine this data. This test yielded a Z-score of 28.6, which indicates that the difference between these two groups was not due to chance. Written using statistical indicia, Z = 28.6, p <.001. Thus, it can be concluded that the pre-Iraq war debate presented in the two newspapers under investigation overwhelming framed it as a matter of process and politics, not substance. Hypothesis 3 predicted that oppositional coverage (O) will be framed more frequently with strategy frames (OSt) than substantive frames (OSu). (OSt > OSu, p< .05). This hypothesis was analyzed using a t-test. There was a significant effect for frames, t(200) = 8.18, p < .001, with strategy frames appearing more frequently than substantive frames. The mean number of substantive-framed paragraphs was 0.96 per article, compared to 2.95 strategy-framed paragraphs per article. Opposition was dominantly framed as a matter of process and politics, rather than a merit-based evaluation of the policy itself. This evidence suggests media coverage did not provide citizens a "foundation for continued opposition" (Entman & Page, 1994, p. 90). Hypothesis 4 predicted that nonoppositional coverage (N) will be framed more frequently with substantive frames (NSu) than strategy frames (NSt). (NSu > NSt, p < .05). This hypothesis was also analyzed using a t-test. There was a significant effect for frames in this category as well, however not in the direction predicted, t(200) = 8.57, p < .001. Strategy frames dominated again, with an average of 6.35 per article, compared to 1.83 substantive-framed nonoppositional paragraphs per article. This can best be explained as a response to the largely strategy-framed opposition. With a dearth of substantive criticisms, little effort was made by the administration and the press to balance these criticisms. These findings suggest that supportive and neutral (nonoppositional) coverage was framed in direct proportion to the framing of oppositional coverage. Although this hypothesis was not supported, it reveals a significant relationship in the practice of framing nonoppositional articles. Even neutral or supportive coverage was framed in a manner of process and politics, which suggests the media gave relatively little basis for citizens to understand the policy itself, and focused on how the policy was going to be decided upon and implemented. The relationship between oppositional and nonoppositional coverage and its framing can be seen in Figure 1. -- Insert Figure 1 about here -- Conclusion As expected, oppositional coverage was overwhelmed by nonoppositional coverage (by a margin of approximately 1 to 2). This provides evidence of media coverage as more closely following, and cultivating support for administration claims (Dorman & Livingston, 1994; Entman & Page, 1994; Massing, 2004; Seib, 2004). The relatively minimal oppositional coverage may also have been evidence of the political culture of the time. Indeed, many readers "were intolerant of articles critical of the president" and "Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, and The Weekly Standard, among others, all stood ready to pounce on journalists who strayed, branding them as liberals or traitors – labels that could permanently damage a career" (Massing, 2004, p. 10). The results of this study suggest that pre-Iraq War debate was presented more as a matter of procedure and politics rather than a description or analysis of policy. Strategy frames were overwhelmingly dominant. Explanations, goals, and merits of the policy were not evaluated in a significant manner when compared to the amount of coverage concerned with who was winning or losing the debate and how the policy would be implemented. The dominance of strategy-framed coverage implies that the complexities and relevant background information of the policy were not reinforced and made as salient in media coverage as other political matters. While it is impossible from this study to measure what the public knew about President Bush's policy, the kind of information presented about the policy is clearly not focused on describing and evaluating the policy. It can be inferred that if since this information was lacking, the public became familiar with the policy in a procedural and political manner. In a synthesis of coverage type and its framing, oppositional and nonoppositional coverage was combined with substantive and strategy framing. Each paragraph assumed one of four categories: oppositional/substantive, oppositional/strategy, nonoppositional/substantive, and nonoppositional/strategy. Over the course of the entire study, the most infrequent type of coverage was oppositional/substantive. The dominant type of coverage was nonoppositional/strategy. This provides some evidence that the media failed to provide citizens with a means for both understanding and participating in policy debate, because the majority of coverage was supportive and uncritical of the policy and framed it in a strategic manner unlikely to evaluate the policy. This correlates with previous research, such as that by Entman and Page (1994) who wrote, "Procedural reproaches, even if decoded by the mass audience as disguised attacks on the policy itself, provide the public little cognitive basis for participating in deliberation" (p. 90). These results also align with similar, major studies in this field (Bennett, 1990; Dorman & Livingston, 1994; Mermin, 1999). Shortly after the Iraq War began, Berman wrote that "when the war dies down, editors and media analysts should catch their breath and ask themselves: How much did press coverage (or lack of coverage) contribute to the public backing for a pre-emptive invasion without the support of the United Nations?" (2003, p. 2). The results of this study suggest the answer to that question is that the media played a central role in failing to properly inform citizens and cultivate public deliberation on crucial policy matters.
References: Althaus, S., Edy, J., Entman, R., & Phalen, P. (1996). Revising the Indexing Hypothesis: Officials, Media, and the Libya Crisis. Political Communication, 13, 407-421. Bennett, W. L. (1990). Toward a Theory of Press-State Relations in the United States. Journal of Communication, 40 (2), 103-125. Bennett, W. L., & Paletz, D. (Eds.). (1994). Taken By Storm. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Bennett, W., Pickard, V., Iozzi, D., Schroeder, C., Lagos, T., & Caswell, C. (2004). Managing the Public Sphere: Journalistic Construction of the Great Globalization Debate. Journal of Communication, 54 (3), 437-455. Berman, A. (2003). Polls Suggest Failure in Pre-War Coverage. Editor and Publisher. Retrieved March 5, 2005, from Editor and Publisher database http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/ article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1848576. Bogart, L. (1981). Press and Public: Who Reads What, When, Where, and Why in American Newspapers. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Callaghan, K., & Schnell, F. (2001). Assessing the Democratic Debate: How the News Media Frame Elite Policy Discourse. Political Communication, 18, 183-212. Dorman, W., & Livingston, S. (1994). News and Historical Content: The Establishing Phase of the Persian Gulf Policy Debate. In W. L. Bennett, & D. Paletz (Eds.), Taken By Storm (pp. 63-81). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Entman, R. (1991). Framing U.S. Coverage of International News: Contrasts in Narratives of the KAL and Iran Air Incidents. Journal of Communication, 41 (4), 6-26. Entman, R., & Page, B. (1994). The News Before the Storm: The Iraq War Debate and the Limits to Media Independence. In W. L. Bennett, & D. Paletz (Eds.), Taken By Storm (pp. 82-104). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Entman, R. (2003). Cascading Activation: Contesting the White House's Frame After 9/11. Political Communication, 20, 415-432. Frey, L., Botan, C., Kreps, G. (2000). Investigating Communication: An Introduction to Research Methods (2nd ed.). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon. Graber, D. (2002). Mass Media & American Politics. Washington, DC: CQ Press. Herman, E., & Chomsky, N. (1988). Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media. New York, NY: Pantheon Books. Iyengar, S., & Simon, A. (1994). News Coverage of the Gulf Crisis and Public Opinion. In Bennett, W. L., & Paletz, D. (Eds.), Taken By Storm (pp. 167-187). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Jamieson, K. H., & Cappella, J. N. (1997). Spiral of Cynicism. New York: Oxford University Press. Kull, S., Ramsay, C., & Lewis, E. (2003). Misperception, the Media, and the Iraq War. Political Science Quarterly, 118, (4), 569-598. Lawrence, R. (2000). Game-Framing the Issues: Tracking the Strategy Frame in Public Policy News. Political Communication, 17, 93-114.
Massing, M. (2004). Now They Tell Us. Retrieved March 5, 2005, from http://www.williambowles.info/media/massing_media.html. Mermin, J. (1999). Debating War and Peace. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Nacos, B., Shapiro, R., Hritzuk, N., & Chadwick, B. (2000). New Issues and the Media: American and German News Coverage of the Global-Warming Debate. In Nacos, B., Shapiro, R., & Pierangelo, I. (Eds.), Decision Making in a Glass House (pp. 41-60). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Nacos, B., Shapiro, R., & Pierangelo, I. (Eds.). (2000). Decision Making in a Glass House. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Seib, P. (2004). Beyond the Front Lines: How the News Media Cover a World Shaped by War. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Sigal, L. (1973). Reporters and Officials. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath and Company. Weaver, D., McCombs, M., & Shaw, D. (2004). Agenda-Setting Research: Issues, Attributes, and Influences. In Kaid, L. (Ed.), (2004) Political Communication Research. (pp. 257-282). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Zaller, J., & Chiu, D. (1996). Government's Little Helper: U.S. Press Coverage of Foreign Policy Crises, 1945-1991. Public Communication, 13, 385-405.
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate Mass Communication and Society Division
Jacob Groshek Graduate Student School of Journalism Indiana University 704 W. 4th St. Bloomington, IN 47401
[log in to unmask] 812-333-9718
Submitted for possible presentation to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication national conference, August 2005 and for consideration in the Leslie J. Moeller Award competition.
Coverage of Illusion: Framing the Pre-Iraq War Debate
ABSTRACT
This study examined how two leading news outlets framed the pre-Iraq War debate. Not only was opposition seldom framed in a substantive manner, neutral and supportive coverage were also rarely framed substantively. These findings suggest that the public was given little basis for participating in policy deliberation and that the media made more effort to illustrate how the policy was going to be implemented, rather than why it should (or should not) be implemented.
Key words: Framing, foreign policy, Iraq War, democratic debate, role of media
|