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Claims, Frames, and Global Warming The Life Course of an Environmental Issue: Claims, Frames, and Global Warming. By Craig Trumbo Graduate Student Department of Agricultural Journalism 440 Henry Mall The University of Wisconsin Madison WI 53706 A paper presented to the Science Interest Group at the Annual Convention of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Washington, DC August 1995 ABSTRACT A content analysis of a decade of coverage of global warming in five national newspapers is presented. The empirical analysis is drawn from a constructionist perspective on the content of news discourse emphasizing claims-making and framing. The issue is also discussed in terms of Downs' issue-attention cycle. The issue's life in the news is modeled as exhibiting three phases that are related to the sources quoted and the frames presented in highest level syntactic structures. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The author would like to graciously acknowledge the guidance provided on this project by Professor Sharon Dunwoody of the School of Journalism at the University of Wisconsin. INTRODUCTION: NEW KINDS OF PROBLEMS. Of the great variety of environmental issues that have achieved social prominence in recent times one stands out as perhaps a prime example of a new class of environmental problems. Global warming represents a type of environmental problem that is generally identified with the idea of global change. In fact, change is at the very root of the issue of global warming. But perhaps a more important characteristic that issues such as global warming, ozone depletion, loss of biodiversity, and others share is their intangibility for the common person. We now must acknowledge at least the potential existence of environmental problems that are practically invisible yet at the same time constitute threat on a global scale. Solutions to such problems will defy the efforts of the physical and biological sciences alone because the social dimension of global change is inescapable. An old adage holds that the first step in solving a problem is recognizing that a problem exists D and in this adage lies the essence of the social aspect of issues like global warming. How society comes to recognize and define something as a problem is no trivial question. This research is concerned with a narrowly defined aspect of that question (news media representation) with regard to one environmental problem (global warming). An important aspect of global warming as a news topic is that it has clearly and dramatically demonstrated a kind of cyclic life course that may be common to the treatment of this variety of long-term issue in the news. Previous research on the volume of news attention given to global warming has shown how the issue rose from virtual obscurity, became a competitively pursued story, and eventually fell from prominence D nearly disappearing altogether.[1] Recent work examining public understanding of the issue has shown that the public is generally misinformed about global warming.[2] Together, these observations beg for a closer examination of the content of the news coverage of the issue. This investigation, in an effort to understand the life course of this environmental issue, will add to the growing literature that has examined global warming. Using a constructivist application of the ideas of claims-making and framing, an empirical evaluation of the content of major newspapers across the span of a decade will show how significant changes in the nature of the content of the news relate to the definition of global warming as a problem. Before providing a description of global warming's career in the news, the theoretical foundation for this investigation will be outlined. SOCIAL PROBLEMS: CONSTRUCTED, CLAIMED, AND FRAMED. Constructivism. Dunlap and others have shown in considerable detail how public concern for the environment arose in the late 1960s and has persisted since.[3] What role did the news media play in this phenomenon? Mauss notes that "the growth of public concern about the environment, as reflected in attitude and opinion surveys, follows rather closely the increased attention and coverage given these issues by the media." [4] Over the past 20 years a wide range of studies have examined the nature of the mass media's coverage of the environment and the variety of social impacts of that coverage.[5] Mauss notes that many studies, considered along with opinion polls conducted over the years, show that concern about and attention to the environment was steadily on the rise even as actual pollution problems were declining in many areas. He concludes that "this finding can be explained, at least in part, by the attention created by mass media coverage and emphasis on pollution." [6] Munton and Bradley echo this sentiment, observing that "article after article, book after book, and commentator after commentator have informed the public about environmental pollution and told them that they should be worried." [7] The relationship between the media and the environment is a complex one that can be fruitfully seen in the light of social problems theory. In recent years the social problems literature has generally embraced a constructivist viewpoint. Constructivists argue that human perception of the world comes about through a process of "meaning-making," which is accomplished through the exchange of a variety of symbols: thus social reality is a constructed thing that is not defined in an absolute sense by the existence of any true reality.[8] Fortunately, the constructivist viewpoint exists across a range of abstraction. In a more moderate form, this tradition emphasizes that evidence of social reality is present in the process of collective definition that is embedded in various forms of social exchange, most especially communication. This viewpoint offers some moderation in the constructivist argument, an argument that when taken to its opposite extreme can present a world that is virtually unknowable.[9] Claims-making. The 1977 work by Spector and Kitsuse that brought a new focus to the constuctivist social problems literature was built upon the tradition of Mills, Gouldner, and most especially Blumer.[10] Recent entries within this tradition that address the environment include the work of Hilgartner and Bosk as well as that of Gamson and Modigliani.[11] Spector and Kitsuse focus on the process of the constructed definition of a social problem, stating that this process is grounded in "claims-making" activities: "the activities of individuals or groups making assertions of grievances and claims with respect to some putative conditions. The emergence of a social problem is contingent upon the organization of activities asserting the need for eradicating, ameliorating, or otherwise changing some condition." [12] The idea of claims-making is the conceptual component of their model that makes it, like Blumer's, a model of reality constructed through a process of symbolic exchange. They point out that "claims-making is always a form of interaction: a demand made by one party to another that something be done." [13] These claims-making activities may take a variety of forms: writing government representatives, petitioning, protest, resolutions made by professional or other organizations, filing lawsuits, garnering media attention or simply filling out complaint forms. "All of those who involve themselves in these activities participate in the process of defining social problems." [14] Participants may take any form: individuals, groups, crusaders, officials, news persons, professionals, or government agencies. Spector and Kitsuse point out that much of the social activity surrounding the recognition of a problem goes on within and between social agencies such as the government, protest groups or professional organizations. While certainly not media-centric, their model can still be seen to confer power to the media. This is most critical to the legitimization stage in their model. Once a claim is recognized as legitimate and worthy of action it will also become recognized as having the characteristics of news. Probably the most fruitful manner of applying Spector and Kitsuse's model to the question of the media's role in the definition of social problems is to use it as a basis for recognizing the media as a social clearinghouse for claims. The media serve as a conduit for communication between social agencies and as a way for those agencies to bring pressure to bear as they champion their claim. Claims that become news are those that have entered one very important arena in the struggle for legitimacy. Framing. The metaphor of the "frame" has been spread far and wide, crossing disciplines to the degree that no summary definition is possible. In a call for communications researchers to strive toward a clarification of framing, Entman observes: Despite its omnipresence across the social sciences and humanities, nowhere is there a general statement of framing theory that shows exactly how frames become embedded within and make themselves manifest in a text, or how framing influences thinking.[15] In terms of looking at media content, the commonly cited roots of framing extend to Goffman's 1974 dramaturgical perspective that frames are "schemata of interpretation" that people use to "locate, perceive, identify, and label," and subsequently to Tuchman's 1978 derivation that assigns frames the role of an organizing device that allows the journalist to more efficiently net, sort, and transmit information.[16] More recent formulations include the 1980 work of Gitlin, who writes that media frames "are principles of selection, emphasis, and presentation composed of little tacit theories about what exists, what happens, and what matters."[17] Gamson and Modigliani consider frames as being embedded within "media packages" that can be seen to "give meaning to an issue. A package has an internal structure. At its core is a central organizing idea, or frame, for making sense of relevant events, suggesting what is at issue." [18] They identify five signifiers of frames: metaphors, exemplars, catchphrases, depiction, and visual images. And according to Dunwoody, when framing is applied to the content of messages it is "a schema or heuristic, a knowledge structure that is activated by some stimulus and is then employed by a journalist throughout story construction."[19] Two recent perspectives on framing offer significant guidance toward a clearer conceptual definition and a useful operationalization. Entman offers that: Framing essentially involves selection and salience. To frame is to select some aspects of a perceived reality and make them more salient in a communicating text, in such a way as to promote a particular problem definition, causal interpretation, moral evaluation, and/or treatment recommendation for the item described. Frames, then, define problems D determine what a causal agent is doing with what costs and benefits, usually measured in terms of common cultural values; diagnose causes D identify the forces creating the problem; make moral judgments D evaluate causal agents and their effects; and suggest remedies D offer and justify treatments for the problem and predict their likely effects. [original emphasis] [20] As Entman brings some clarity to the concept, Pan and Kosicki provide a basis on which to observe frames by outlining four categories of framing devices that may be located in news discourse.[21] Syntactical Structures are general organizing schemes that most obviously manifest themselves as the inverted pyramid. Script Structures have "distinct structure defined by the rules that may be called story grammars. A generic version consists of the five Ws and one H in news writing." Thematic Structures more commonly occur in issue-related stories as opposed to event stories. These are causal statements that can be seen as hypothesis tests having the form of a statement and then its logical support based on traditional modes of journalistic evidence (e.g., quotes, attribution). Rhetorical Devices refer back to Gamson's framing devices: metaphors, exemplars, catchphrases, depiction, and visual images. There is some common ground between the work of Entman and the work of Pan and Kosicki. These ideas will be returned to in the operational definitions used in this study. But first, an overview of global warming's life in the news will be offered as background. GLOBAL WARMING: CHARACTERIZING THE LIFE OF THE ISSUE. At the heart of global warming is the proposition that human activities are altering the composition of the planet's atmosphere to a degree sufficient to affect the natural processes that play fundamental roles in shaping global climate. Many, perhaps even most, scientists agree that the release of gasses such as carbon dioxide, CFCs, and methane will have the consequence of raising the average temperature on Earth. A considerable amount of contention exists over issues such as when this might happen, how quickly it might come about, and the degree and nature of the consequences. How can global warming's history in the news be summed? Figure 1 shows the amount of news coverage given to global warming in five major newspapers over the past decade (details of Figure 1 are addressed below). Perhaps it could be concluded that the issue of global warming has simply enjoyed its day in the sun. Puns aside, a serious problem presents itself if one considers that during the span of this decade there was little substantive change in the science that should warrant diminishing concern. It is easy to understand the spike of attention associated with Dr. James Hansen's Congressional testimony (during the drought summer of 1988) that global warming had manifested itself. But the overall build-up and eventual decline of news coverage presents a more complex problem. The existence of a cycle of attention is clear. But in a broader sense it is important to ask what social forces might drive such a cycle and how these forces might exert themselves through the news. Transient attention to specific issues may be typical of American public opinion, policy, and media coverage. Downs offers his "issue-attention cycle" as an explanation for such coming and goings of news coverage and public concern. In this theory he suggests that there are typically five stages to the life of a given issue.[22] 1. Pre-problem. "This prevails when some highly undesirable social condition exists but has not yet captured much public attention, even though some experts or interest groups may already be alarmed by it." 2. Alarmed discovery, euphoric enthusiasm. "As a result of some dramatic series of events, the public suddenly becomes both aware of and alarmed about the evils of a particular problem." This is combined with a reaction of overconfidence, "euphoric enthusiasm," in society's ability to discover a solution. 3. Realizing the cost. "A gradually spreading realization that the cost of solving the problem is very high indeed." The public and policymakers also realize that the problem is being caused by a condition which is providing benefits to society. 4. Gradual decline of interest. Three reactions occur. Some people become discouraged. Some suppress attention out of fear. Others simply get bored. Often, all three reactions operate to varying degrees. Meanwhile, another issue is on the rise and attention shifts. 5. Post-problem. "A prolonged limbo D a twilight realm of lesser attention or spasmodic recurrence of interest."[23] Looking at the issue of global warming in terms of Downs' issue-attention cycle is a useful way to present a brief history of the issue, and will present a useful tool for approaching the problems and results of this investigation. The time prior to 1988, when global warming was primarily the concern of scientists and top policy-makers, can easily be characterized as the pre-problem stage. During this time there was considerable scientific activity, extending back to the 1750s in fact. The policy attention that the early science produced caused some mild controversy that served to earn the issue prominent display in the news on a couple of occasions. But public awareness of the issue remained low in the absence of any sustained media attention. An important aspect of the pre-problem stage involves the preparation of the issue for its alarmed discovery. For global warming, much of this preparation was in the form of the generally rising level of environmental concern in society[24] and the linkage of global warming to the related atmospheric problem of ozone depletion.[25] This linkage gave global warming added legitimacy and plausibility. This preparation is also political. Between 1985 and 1988 a number of influential Congresspersons adopted climate change as an important concern. The scientists who were becoming increasingly concerned about global warming therefore had excellent access to an important public arena as conditions became favorable for the alarmed discovery of warming. It takes little imagination to see the alarmed discovery heralded by Hansen's mid-drought Congressional testimony, set against the backdrop of the Yellowstone fires. It is interesting to speculate on how the issue might have behaved if there had not been a circumstantial heat wave that summer and if Yellowstone had not become so engulfed. But Downs' second stage has an inherent dualism as it is also characterized by a euphoric optimism over solutions. This contrast was abundantly clear in the headlines of late 1988: Calculating the consequences of a warmer planet earth; Major greenhouse impact is unavoidable, experts say; Scientists dream up bold remedies for ailing atmosphere; Fighting the greenhouse effect. But perhaps nothing captured this dualism better than the contrast between Hansen's testimony and President Bush's pledge to counter the greenhouse effect with "the White House effect."[26] The third stage, a realization of the true cost, gradually replaced this optimism and alarm. This change came about primarily through actions in the political sphere. The science bashing carried out by then Chief of Staff John Sununu served to promote the idea that solving the problem of global warming would bear an enormous price tag, even though many experts disagreed. It was a fear of the economics of preventing climate change that motivated Bush to non-action and prompted Sununu to order that Hansen's written testimony be watered down. But it was more than just politics. By 1992 the true complexity of the problem was becoming evident as nations of the world began contemplating a treaty to slow the release of greenhouse gases. Downs points out that it is during this part of the cycle that society becomes aware that the problem at hand is related to things that are held dear, things that provide benefit. A May 25, 1992, New York Times business page article tells how "the price of driving a car has never been lower" because of the plummeting cost of oil.[27] It goes on to say that, world-wide, automobiles are reproducing faster than people and this poses dire consequences for global warming. Then of course, there's the complex interactions of population and economics. Another Times article, on the same day's front page, reveals how China's "contribution to global warming may be rising more quickly than that of any other country."[28] This is due to the fact that one fifth of earth's population is entering a period of economic growth fueled by coal. Once again, the consequences are related to global warming. On a more fundamental level what is becoming increasingly evident is global warming's utter complexity, both scientific and social. Writing from the Earth Summit in Rio, The New York Times' William K. Stevens contrasts a 1972 conference on the environment with the 1992 Earth Summit: In those palmy save-the-whales years, full of hope and idealism, the delegates to the United Nations Environment Conference in Sweden asserted confidently that "the capability of man to improve the environment increases with each passing day." Here, the optimism of 1972 has been replaced by a hard realism. The delegates in Rio have discovered how hard it is for nations to unite on fundamental environmental problems facing them.[29] The article goes on to emphasize the difficulties associated with simultaneously negotiating the reduction of both deforestation in developing nations and industrial emissions in developed ones. Two aspects of the same problem, in more ways than one. The article's headline summarizes that the "Earth Summit finds the years of optimism are a fading memory." It's unlikely that the stages of Downs cycle operate independently or in any strict linear sense. There should be considerable overlap between the grim realizations of phase three and the declining attention of phase four. There should also be other demands being made on the public's attention. The public arenas and ecologies of news perspectives tells us that there are only so many issues that can be supported at a given time and that those issues must compete with each other in a sort of zero-sum game.[30] As the difficult nature of global warming became news D and the volume of media attention began to decline D the nation was also sliding into increasingly difficult economic conditions, was captivated by Operation Desert Storm, and began anticipating the most unusual presidential election in recent memory. As Downs suggests, there were new issues to attend to. And what of the fifth stage in the cycle? Did the issue of global warming enter "a prolonged limbo D a twilight realm of lesser attention?" News coverage of global warming had a brief comeback in mid-1992 thanks to the Earth Summit. However, the amount of media attention to global warming during the first six months of 1993 is similar in volume to that of the first half of 1988.[31] Clinton's announcement of his "Climate Change Action Plan" in late 1993 received cursory coverage and no follow-up. Coverage in 1994 was scant. And while outside of the bounds of this analysis, another recurrence of attention occurred in early 1995 as Antarctic pack ice went to sea while the Earth Summit treaty was being reviewed in Berlin. But Downs holds that an issue in the fifth stage of the cycle is not a simple return to its earlier state. In the wake of its rise and fall, global warming has entered the popular lexicon D even being featured in television and film drama D and has created significant international agreements. Downs points out that such factors "almost always persist and often have some impact even after public attention has shifted elsewhere."[32] So may be the case with global warming. While examining the volume of media attention and the nature of the news story can inform many questions about the life course of this issue, much of the knowledge to be gained about global warming's history as a socially defined problem lies embedded in the content of the news. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM AND OPERATIONAL CONCEPTS. Because of their presumed influence, the media become, to quote Gurevitch and Levy (1985), "a site on which various social groups, institutions, and ideologies struggle over the definition and construction of social reality." The media, in this view, provide a series of arenas in which symbolic contests are carried out among competing sponsors of meaning. Participants in symbolic contests read their success or failure by how well their preferred meanings and interpretations are doing in various media arenas. Prominence in these arenas is taken as an outcome measure in its own right, independent of evidence on the degree to which the messages are being read by the public. Essentially, sponsors of different frames monitor media discourse to see how well it tells the story they want told, and they measure their success or failure accordingly.[33] The ultimate rationale for this study is well captured by the above passage from Gamson, Croteau, Hoynes, and Sasson. In this light it is taken that media content will capture important aspects of an evolving struggle to define a problem. Two ideas require operationalization: claims-makers and frames. Both are closely related and are being cast under the constructionist rubric. The idea of the claims-maker is being operationally defined as a function of the attributed source. While journalists bring a great deal more to a story than a collection of sources D things like background and emphasis D it is in the source that the broader authority of the story resides. Attribution is the first lesson in journalism. But sources are used for a wide variety of reasons, including their past history with both individual journalists and the media in general, prominence in their field, availability, and their ability to provide useful material such as interesting quotes. Nonetheless, any party wishing to place a claim in the media arena has a keen interest in becoming a source or to be represented by a source. And as was pointed out above, prominence in the news may be taken by the claims-maker as success in its own right. Perhaps the best indicator of that variety of success is the quote. While journalists quote for as many different reasons as they choose sources, from the viewpoint of the claims-maker nothing signifies successful access to the media arena quite as well as a direct quote. This study will define the claims-maker as the quoted source. The following section addressing measurement details how claims-maker categories are developed and identified. Framing is being operationalized in concert with claims-making. In fact, for this study it will be held that the frame is the claim being made by the media and that this claim is manifest in the macro level meeting of Pan and Kosicki's syntactical and thematic structures. In other words, the frame is the claim presented by the media in the headline and the lead paragraph (lead is addressed below). Frames of this form are held to have the four functions specified by Entman: to define problems, diagnose causes, make moral judgments, and to suggest remedies. Locating the frame at the top of the inverted pyramid draws from Entman's emphasis of salience in his definition of framing. Within that emphasis, salience "means making a piece of information more noticeable, meaningful, or memorable to audiences. An increase in salience enhances the probability that receivers will perceive the information, discern meaning, and thus process it, and store it in memory." [34] Restricting the operationalization of the frame to only the headline and lead places this analysis firmly on the macro level. Tradition holds that the headline and lead should be written to inform the reader as to what is most important about the story. While styles vary and there are exceptions to the inverted pyramid, journalists and their editors are aware of the fact they are competing for the reader's attention and that the top of the story is generally the point of the readers' first contact with the information content of the story. The specification of claims-makers and frames continues below in the section on measurement. At this point the research questions being addressed may be presented: RQ1: Can Downs' issue-attention cycle serve as a model in which the amount of coverage of this issue may be seen in terms of phases? RQ2: How are frames and claims-makers distributed in media coverage of global warming? Do these distributions change through time? RQ3: Are there associations among the frames and claims-makers? METHODS. Sample. The newspaper story is the unit of analysis, based on a set of newspapers chosen to represent national level media. Selecting a set of newspapers to represent the national media is always a somewhat debatable matter. This study follows the lead of others[35] in selecting The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Christian Science Monitor, and The Wall Street Journal. Further support for this selection comes from a qualitative review which seeks to define the world's 20 most important newspapers. Merrill states: In the vast global wasteland of crass and mass journalistic mediocrity is a small coterie of serious and thoughtful internationally oriented newspapers that offers a select group of readers an in-depth, rational alternative. . . . They are well-informed, articulate papers that thoughtful people the world over take seriously.[36] Merrill cites the five papers above plus The Miami Herald as the best in the United States (in no assigned order). Two other factors support this selection. Each of the five papers selected is generating its own coverage of the issue at hand through the employment of its own science writers. Therefore, each story selected from these newspapers is original and unique. Many of these stories go on to live a second life in other papers across the nation via the Associated Press and other wire services. Finally, this set of five newspapers is represented in a single consistent reference index: the National Newspaper Index. [37] Only news stories are used in this study. News stories are defined as content containing references to global warming or the greenhouse effect, excluding editorials, opinion columns, letters to the editor and advertisements. The selection of stories was done using a computerized version of the National Newspaper Index. Across the period of the study approximately 500 items on global warming appeared in these newspapers. Only about half that number was determined to be necessary to empower statistical analysis. However, subsequent analytic needs involving comparison of distinct phases of coverage necessitated over-sampling of the early and late phases of coverage (determination of the Phases is discussed shortly). Therefore, a random half of the stories that fell in Phase 2 were selected and all of the stories that fell in Phases 1 and 3 were selected. The final sample yielded a total of 252 stories entered into the analysis. Measurement: Claims-makers. As discussed above, claims-makers are being operationalized as quoted sources. Examination of the full content of the Washington Post coverage revealed the following categories of individuals quoted: university scientists, government scientists (NASA, NOAA, etc.), other scientists (including foreign), Congresspersons, Presidential administrations, foreign officials, environmental interest groups, business and industry interest groups. All but 6, or 98% of all quoted sources, fell into these categories. For analysis, categories were collapsed to scientists, politicians, and interest groups. The number of quotes for each category were summed by story for an interval level measure. Distributions were found to be highly skewed, so a nominal level measure was also computed as the presence or absence of each source category in a story. Measurement: Frame. Frame is being conceptualized as the claim presented in the highest syntactical structures, the headline and the lead. A qualitative reading of all headlines and lead paragraphs in the Washington Post revealed four prominent categories that agreed well with Entman's four purposes of frames: 1. Define Problems: impacts of global warming. These stories deal with what will happen as a consequence of this phenomenon. Impacts may be negative (coastal flooding), positive (improved regional agriculture), or debated. 2. Diagnose Causes: evidence as to the realty of global warming as a problem. These are typically presentations of scientific findings that support the idea that there is a problem (evidence of rising sea level), refute the idea that there is a problem (evidence that changes are within limits of natural variance), or present the argument that the nature of the problem is unknown. 3. Make moral judgments: action statements. These stories present general statements calling for action or reporting action taken (U.S. should sign a treaty, did sign a treaty), arguing against action or reporting action blocked (emission standards not needed, scientific testimony altered), or present the argument that a course of action is not clear. 4. Suggest remedies: provide specific information about how solutions should be implemented. These stories report specific solutions that have been proposed or implemented (tougher emission standards), solutions that have been rejected or deemed inadequate (voluntary programs), or present a debate about a specific solution or solutions. Note that the specificity of the solution D a statement of exactly how the solution should be carried out D is an important distinction between an action statement and a solution statement. All but 17, or 93% of all stories fell into one of these four categories. Most of the stories could be classified by reading only the headline. When headlines were ambiguous (often because they were too short) the first paragraph was read. Most stories were classified by this point. In a few cases it was necessary to read into the story by an additional paragraph or two (typically when the story begins with an anecdote). The goal of the classification is to identify the most immediately identifiable characteristic of the story with respect to the four categories.[38] DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS. Figure 1 presents the distribution of the sample through time and Figure 2 presents the distribution of stories through the 5 newspapers (without over-sampling). Inspection of this distribution supported the idea that the attention paid to this issue might be divided into distinct phases for analysis. Using the ideas of Downs, three distinct phases were identified. The overall distribution fits Downs' 5 stage model fairly well. Downs proposes that attention to an issue will remain low until a dramatic discovery brings a sudden increase in salience. While the issue-attention cycle does not offer specific predictions about changing salience during the middle three stages it does suggest general aspects of the content of these stages and also suggests that salience during these stages should be at its highest before feathering into a decline. Finally, Downs directly predicts that the final phase will involve a lowering of the salience of the issue, but not a lowering to the levels seen in the first stage. An examination of the time distribution of stories clearly suggests 2 important points in the series: mid-1988 when Hansen testifies before Congress and mid-1992 when the Earth Summit concludes. A fifth order polynomial was found to fit the data so that the important points in the issue fell near the curve's inflections. The curve clearly suggests Downs' overall propositions as they would be applied to the volume of media attention. Dividing the series into these three segments and fitting linear functions to each segment shows that the means and the slopes vary between the phases (analysis of variance significant at p < .001). Stories were thus coded as being in Phase 1, 2, or 3. Because of the content of the news, the three phases are being labeled as pre-controversy, controversy, and post-controversy. Regarding the relationship between frames and claims-makers, it is first necessary to report the obvious: political and special interests are strongly associated with the judgment frame while scientists are strongly associated with the causes frame. This is true across the full span of the decade, as shown in Figure 3. More interesting results are found by examining changes across phases in prevalence of each claims-maker and each frame. Figure 4 shows that there was a significant decline in scientists as a percentage of all claims-makers quoted across the decade.[39] Quotes of political and special interest claims-makers both increased slightly, but not significantly. Previous research on global warming by Miller and others has shown that scientific sources were being crowded out by political sources during the late 1980s.[40] This analysis of a full decade supports their observation and shows that it is part of a longer-term trend. It is an open question as to why scientists declined as quoted sources so dramatically. Of course it must be recognized that story space is a finite resource. Although not statistically significant, special interests made the second largest gain across the decade. Mazur and others have noted that as the issue of global warming matured the cold war as simultaneously coming to an end. This allowed a number of scientifically-oriented special interest groups (for example the Union of Concerned Scientists) to shift their attention from nuclear weapons issues to environmental issues such as global warming. An equally interesting question looks at how the prevalence of frames shifted as the issue evolved. Figure 5 shows that the framing of the issue moved away from defining problems and diagnosing causes and toward making judgments and suggesting remedies. These results can again be seen as a situation in which a set of perspectives must compete for finite space in a limited number of stories. The relationship that exists between the results in Figure 3 and the results in Figure 4 can be seen in terms of the impacts reported in Figure 5. As politicians and interest groups were increasingly successful in making their claims (Figure 4) they brought along their associated frames (Figure 3) in a process that influenced the make-up of the content of the news (Figure 5). These results beg the interesting question of the relative role of claims-making and framing in the changing attention that the media give to the issue. How do claims-makers and frames compare in their ability to predict the amount of coverage given to the issue? To address this question a secondary dataset was extracted as a time series. The unit of analysis was set as 2 month periods (n = 60) and interval level variables were created as: number of stories per unit, number of quotes for each claims-maker category per unit, and number of stories for each frame in each unit. Each unit was assigned to one of the three phases. First, what relationships exist within the variables representing claims-makers and frames? It must be noted that these variables are highly correlated with one another because each is a product of the number of stories in a given 2 month period (average correlation .38 with upper range of .89). Measures of association involving claims-makers, frames, and the number of stories must be used with caution because they contain a strong spurious element. However, it is reasonable to see if the set of claims-maker and frame variables form interpretable factors that could describe their relationship and that might be useful in further analysis. Table 1 presents a factor analysis of the frame and claims-maker variables that provides a satisfactory solution. The associations found in the crosstabulations are upheld here as it is shown that political and special interest claims-makers group together with their associated frames to form one factor while scientists and their associated frames group to form another. An alternative result would have found frames grouping together and claims-makers grouping together. This strongly suggests that the two concepts of frames and claims-makers are part of a larger single concept relating to the content of news discourse. How well do these factors perform in predicting the most salient characteristic of the issue D the dramatically changing amount of news coverage? While, as noted above, the absolute strength of an association with the number of stories per unit of time involves a spurious element, it is reasonable to pit the two factors against one another in a relative evaluation. Table 2 present the results of an analysis in which the number of stories per unit is regressed on dependent variables made up of factor scores (the political-interest factor is simply being called political for the remaining analysis). The political factor proved to be only a slightly stronger predictor of the number of stories, in fact there is not a significant difference in the two equations. Discriminant analysis was used to more thoroughly evaluate the relationship between the two derived factors and to use them to judge the validity of the three proposed phases. Table 3 reports the results of three discriminant analyses in which each factor was first evaluated by itself before the two were combined in a single analysis. Taken individually, it is seen that the scientific factor does a somewhat better job than the political factor in correctly classifying cases into the three phases, presenting classification rates of 50% and 45% respectively. Both rates are moderately successful as compared to the 33% rate that would be expected by chance. An examination of the relative success rates for each phase (on the diagonal in each matrix) shows that the political factor did an excellent job in correctly classifying Phase 1 but did a poor job of distinguishing between Phases 2 and 3. On the other hand, the scientific factor did an equally good job of distinguishing between Phases 1 and 2 but a poor job classifying Phase 3. This can be explained by the changing prevalence of claims-ma kers and frames in each of the phases. If both factors are entered into the analysis together they combine to do a quite respectable job of correctly classifying the matrix, hitting the mark 63.3% of the time, a marked improvement over the 33% chance rate. This clearly indicates that the two factors overlap considerably in their relationship within the three phase model. Further, it is again seen that the classification rates on the diagonal decline across the phases with Phase 1 being perfectly classified while Phase 3 is less well classified. CONCLUSION. This project does not hold as an express purpose the operationalization of Downs' issue-attention cycle. But the model can be used as a more general basis for a division of the decade's media coverage of global warming into three distinct phases. Inferring from Downs' model to what might be expected to be seen regarding the amount of media attention to an issue does allow the first research question to be affirmatively resolved. It must be emphasized that Downs' issue-attention cycle is a social process model and is not specifically designed to evaluate news media attention to an issue. Nonetheless, elements of the issue-attention cycle do seem to fit a qualitative reading of the news coverage of global warming. This, combined with the good fit between the observed quantity of news attention and the expectations of the Downs model, suggests that it might be reasonable to interpret the three phases used in this study as a partial expression of the issue-attention cycle. The results of the second research question show that scientists become less dominant sources as the issue matures. At the same time the emphasis of the news coverage shifts away from a presentation of the issue in terms of its causes and problematic nature and toward a presentation more grounded in political debate and the proposal of solutions. These observations seem to dovetail most closely with the first three stages in the issue-attention cycle. The progression from the pre-problem stage, to alarmed discovery, and then to a realization of the costs strongly suggests that there should be a politicization of the issue, an increase in its level of controversy, and a shift toward judgments and solutions. That progression was observed in this study. Overall, these results suggest that the most appropriate way to relate Downs' model to the changes observed in media coverage of global warming is to argue that what has been observed across this decade is just the first three stages of the cycle. This would predict that the years following 1994 should present a continued decline of media attention to the issue punctuated only by a "spasmodic recurrence of interest," as Downs' puts it. A casual observation of the issue during 1995 suggests that this is in fact what is happening. A follow-up study may in future years provide evidence of this. The results of the third research question apply less to the issue-attention cycle and more to the theoretical basis of this investigation as it relates to news media coverage of environmental controversies. To answer the third research question: yes, strong associations do exist between the claims-makers and frames observed in this study. What might these associations tell us about journalistic coverage of environmental controversy? The results show that there is greater independence between phases and frames than there is between phases and claims-makers. Thus, changes that occurred in the life course of the issue perhaps involved shifts linked to who was getting their message into the media rather than how the media was choosing to present the information. It may be reasonable, at least in this case, to argue that a good deal of the journalistic discretion that goes into shaping media coverage of an environmental controversy occurs by way of deciding which sources to use and how much overall attention to give the issue. These decisions seem to hold more sway over the life of an issue compared to the decisions that allow a point of view D a frame D to dominate a story. In essence, this supports a model of transmission rather than processing: reporting over interpretation. The more alarming aspect of the results of this study is unfortunately also the least surprising: that scientists left the debate as it heated up. In fact, scientists found themselves sharing a shrinking portion of a growing media pie during an important part of the public debate over global warming. Whether they were squeezed out by other sources or chose to become distanced from an increasingly political debate is an open question. [--- Pict Graphic Goes Here ---] [--- Pict Graphic Goes Here ---] Table 1. Factor Analysis: Claim and Frame Variables Factor 1 Factor 2 Variable Mean SD Political Scientific Debate Proclamation Claimsmaker: Special Interest Sources 2.4 3.5 .85 * .12 Frame: Remedies for Problem 0.5 1.1 .84 * -.33 Claimsmaker: Political Sources 3.2 4.8 .76 * .48 Frame: Moral Judgments about Problem 1.5 2.2 .70 * .55 Claimsmaker: Scientist Sources 5.5 5.4 .22 .87 * Frame: Causes of Problem 1.3 1.3 .19 .86 * Frame: Problem Definition 0.7 0.9 -.09 .53 * Percentage of total variance explained 48.5 23.3 Principle components analysis with varimax rotation. Two factors explain 71.8 percent of total variance, n = 60. Table 2. Regression Analysis: Comparison of Factor Scores. Dependent variable = number of stories in 2 month period, n = 60. Independent Variable R2 Std. Beta t value p Fact Score: Political .50 .71 7.6 <.001 Fact Score: Scientific .45 .67 6.9 <.001 difference between equations not significant Table 3. Discriminant Analysis: Comparison of Political and Scientific Factors. For the case of a 3 group analysis, n = 60. Ind. Variable: Factor Score Political Predicted Phase Actual Phase N Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 1: Pre-controversy 20 100.0% (20) 0.0% (0) 0.0% (0) Phase 2: Controversy 25 44.0% (11) 12.0% (3) 44.0% (11) Phase 3: Post-controversy 15 46.7% (7) 26.7% (4) 26.7% (4) Prior Probability = 33% Correct Classification = 45.0% Canonical Correlation = .39 Wilks' Lambda = .85 p < .01 Ind. Variable: Factor Score Scientific Predicted Phase Actual Phase N Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 1: Pre-controversy 20 55.0% (11) 5.0% (1) 40.0% (8) Phase 2: Controversy 25 20.0% (5) 60.0% (15) 20.0% (5) Phase 3: Post-controversy 15 46.7% (7) 26.7% (4) 26.7% (4) Prior Probability = 33% Correct Classification = 50.0% Canonical Correlation = .46 Wilks' Lambda = .79 p < .01 Ind. Variables: Scientific and Political Predicted Phase Actual Phase N Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 1: Pre-controversy 20 95.0% (19) 5.0% (1) 0.0% (0) Phase 2: Controversy 25 36.0% (9) 48.0% (12) 16.0% (4) Phase 3: Post-controversy 15 33.3% (5) 20.0% (3) 46.7% (7) Prior Probability = 33% Correct Classification = 63.3% Scientific: Canonical Correlation = .27 Wilks' Lambda = .66 p < .001 Political: Canonical Correlation = .54 Wilks' Lambda = .79 p < .01 NOTES. [1] Ungar, S (1992). The rise and (relative) decline of global wa rming as a social problem. The Sociological Quarterly 33(4)483-501; Mazur, A. & Lee, J. (1993). Sounding t he global alarm: Environmental issues in the US national news. Social Stu dies of Science 23:681-720; Trumbo, C. (1995) Longi tudinal modeling of public issues with the agenda-se tting process: The case of global warming. Journalism and Mass Communicat ion Monographs 152. [2] Kempton, W. (1991). Lay p erspectives on global climate change. Global Environme ntal Change. Human and Policy Dimensions 1(3):183-208; Bostrom, A., Morga n, M. G., Fischoff, B., & Read, D. (1994). What do people know about gl obal climate change? (1) Mental models and (2) Surve y studies of educated laypeople. Risk Analysis 14(6): 959-982. [3] Dunlap, R. E., & Mertig, A. G. (1992). The evolution of the U.S. environmental movement from 1970 to 1990: An overview. In R. E. Dunlap & A. G. Mertig (Eds.) American Environmentali sm: The U.S. Environmental Movement 1970-1990 (pp. 1-9). Philadelphia: Taylor and Francis. [4] Mauss, A. (1975). Social Pro blems as Social Movements. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippinc ott. [5] A quasi-representative sample: Schoenfeld, A. C., Meier, R. F. , & Griffin, R. J. (1979). Constructing a social probl em: The press and the environment. Social Problems, 27 (1), pp. 38-61, (p. 38); Howenstine, E. (1987). Environmental reportin g: Shift from 1979 to 1982. Journalism Quarterly, 64 (4), pp. 842-846; Schoenfeld, A. C. (1980). Newsper sons and the environment today. Journalism Quarterly, 57 (3), pp. 456-462 ; Strodthoff, G. C., Hawkins, R. P., & Schoenfeld, A . C. (1985). Media roles in a social movement: A mod el of ideology diffusion. Journal of Communication, 35 (2), pp. 134-53; Atwater, T., Salwen, M. B., & Anderson, R. B. (1985). Media agenda-setting with environmental issues. Jou rnalism Quarterly, 62 (2), pp. 393-397; Protess, D. L., et al. (1987). The impact of investigative reporting on public opinion and policy-making : targeting toxic waste. Public Opinion Quarterly, 5 1 (2), pp. 166-185; Mazur, A. and Lee, J. (1993). So unding the Global Alarm: Environmental Issues in the U.S. National News. Social Studies of Science 23:681-720; Medler, J. F. , & Medler, M. J. (1993). Media images as environmen tal policy. In R. J. Spitzer (Ed.), Media and public policy (pp. 121-132). Westport, CT: Praeger. [6] Mauss, A. (1975) p. 5 88. [7] Munton, D., & Bradley, L. (1970). American Public Opinion and E nvironmental Pollution. The Behavioral Science Researc h Report, Ohio State University (p. 23). [8] Constructionism is an extr act of the symbolic interactionist and phenomenological traditions in sociology. For an overview see: Ritzer, G. (1992). Contem porary Sociological Theory . New York: McGraw-Hill. For an application of this perspective to issues of science see: Sismondo, S. (1993). Some social constructions. Social Studi es of Science, 23, pp. 515-553. [9] Best, J. (1989 ). Afterword: Extending the constructionist perspective: A conclusion and an introduction. In J. Best (Ed.), Images of Issues: Typifying Contemporary Social Problems (pp. 243-250) , New York: Aldine De Gruyter. [10] Spector, M. & Kitsuse, J. (1977). C onstructing Social Problems. Menlo Park, CA: Cummings; Gouldner, A. (1970). The Coming Crisis in Western Sociology. New York: Avon; Blumer, H. (1971). Social problems as collective behavior. Social Problems 18:298-306. [11] Hilgartner, S., & Bosk , C. L. (1988). The rise and fall of social problems: A public arenas model. American Journal of Sociology 94(1):53-78; Gamson , W. A., & Modigliani, A. (1989). Media discourse an d public opinion on nuclear power: A constructionist approach. American Journal of Sociology 95(1): 1-37. [12] Spector & Ki tsuse (1977) p. 75. [13] Spector & Kitsuse (1977) p. 78. [14] Spector & Kitsuse (1977) p. 79. [15] Entman, R. M. (1993). Framing: Toward cla rification of a fractured paradigm. Journal of Communi cation 43(4): 51-58. [16] Goffman, E. (1974). 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[24] Dunlap, R. E. (1992). Trends i n public opinion toward environmental issues: 1965-199 2. In, R. E. Dunlap & A. G. Mertig (Eds.), American Environmentalism. The U.S. Environmental Movement 1970-1990, (pp. 89-115 ). Philadelphia: Taylor and Francis. [25] Mazur & Lee (1993). [26] Bu sh's campaign comments are reviewed on the ABC News, 12/27/89. [27] Wal d, M. L. (1992, May 25). Cheap fuel hurts goal for climate. The New York Times, pp. A-35, A-38. [28] WuDunn, S. L. (1992, May 25). Difficult algebra for China: Coal = growth = pol lution. The New York Times, pp. A-1, A-5. [29] Stevens, W. K. (1992, Ju ne 9). Earth summit finds the years of optimism are a fading memory. The New York Times, p. C-4. [30] Hilgartner, S., & Bosk, C. L. (1988). The rise and fall of social problems: A public arenas model. American Journal of Sociology, 94 (1), pp. 53-78; M olotch, H. L., Protess, D. L., & Gordon, M. T. (1987 ). The media-policy connection: Ecologies of news. In D. Paletz (Ed.) ( 1988). Political Communication: Theories, Cases and Assessments (pp. 26-48). Norwood, NJ: Ablex. [31] During the first 6 mo nths of 1993 there are approximately 350 column inches of copy devoted to global warming in the five newspapers, during the fir st 6 months of 1988 there were approximately 400 col umn inches. For comparison, during the peak in atten tion in the last 6 months of 1989, the five papers devoted approximately 1200 column inches. [32] Downs (1972) p. 41. [33 ] Gamson, W. A., Croteau, D., Hoynes, W., & Sasson, T. (1992). Media ima ges and the social construction of reality. Annual Review of Sociology 18:373-93. [34] Entman (1993) p. 53. [35] Reese, S, & Danielian, L. (1989). Intermedia influence and the drug issue: Conve rging on cocaine. In P. Shoemaker (Ed.), Communication campaigns about dr ugs (pp. 29-46). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. [36] Merr ill, J. (1990). Global elite: A newspaper community of reason. Gannett Ce nter Journal 4(4):91-102. [37] It must be recognized that a number of other metro newspapers contribute significantly to th e population of high visibility science stories produced in this country (e.g., The Dallas Morning News, The Boston Globe, Th e Seattle Post-Intelligencer ). An effort was made t o integrate a selection of such papers into the stud y. However, the only reasonable method of searching a wider variety of pa pers, and of obtaining their stories, is via the Nex is database. Unfortunately, none of the major papers that would have been interesting to add to this study are represented in Nexis prior to about 1990-1991. Many were added in 1991-1992. Since this study involves looking at the issue longitudinall y, newspaper selection was thus constrained. [38] Coding for the other variables involved manifest content and required very little (if any) j udgment, so reliability was not evaluated. Coding for the frame variable does involve judgment so an inter-coder reliability te st was executed. A value for Scott's pi of .78 was achieved and deemed acceptable. [39] Note that because the claims-maker categories are not mutually exclusive within the unit of analysis the crosstabulations for Figure 4 were executed exclusive to each claims-maker category, rather than by each pha se as Figure 4 presents. [40] Lichter, R. S. & Lichter, L. S. (1992). T he Great Greenhouse Debate. Media Coverage and Expert Opinion on Global Warming. Media Monitor VI(10):1-6; Miller, M. M., J. Boone, and D. Fowler, (1990). "The Emergence of Green house Effect on the Issue Agenda: A News Stream Anal ysis," News Computing Journal 7(4):25-38.
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