AEJMC Archives

AEJMC Archives


View:

Next Message | Previous Message
Next in Topic | Previous in Topic
Next by Same Author | Previous by Same Author
Chronologically | Most Recent First
Proportional Font | Monospaced Font

Options:

Join or Leave AEJMC
Reply | Post New Message
Search Archives


Subject: AEJ 95 AllenD CJ Theories of democracy and American journalism
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Tue, 13 Feb 1996 21:51:23 EST
Content-Type:text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
Parts/Attachments

text/plain (1306 lines)


Theories of Democracy and American Journalism:
Creating an Active Public[1]
 
David S. Allen
Illinois State University
Introduction
        If there is any one idea that can be said to be at the heart of
 
      American journalism, it is democracy.  It is through the idea of
 
      democracy that the press justifies many of the privileges and
 
   responsibilities granted to it.  What Walter Lippmann wrote in 1922
 
         still seems to be true:
 
        [P]ractically everywhere it is assumed that the
     press should do spontaneously for us what primitive
     democracy imagined each of us could do spontaneously
     for himself, that every day and twice a day it will
     present us with a true picture of all the outer
     world in which we are interested (p. 203).
        For all the rhetoric that surrounds the press's democratic mission,
 
          however, journalists seem to have little idea of what democracy
actually
 
            means.  They often offer broad platitudes in praise of democracy,
but
 
           rarely do they offer explicit definitions.  Of course, in this
regard,
 
            journalists are really no better or worse than other members of
society.
 Political theorists have recognized that democracy is not a unified
 
          theoretical concept, but rather a diverse set of ideas about how to
 
         structure society.  As political theorist David Held notes, democracy
in
 
            its most simplistic form means "rule by the people" (p. 2). Moving
much
 
            beyond that definition, however, becomes a difficult task.  Who are
the
 
            people?  What is meant by rule?  How much participation is required
or
 
            allowed?  The theory that one elects to follow depends to a great
degree
 
            on how one answers those questions.
        If political theorists are correct in arguing that there are many
 
        varieties of democracy--and there seems to be few who are willing that
 
            challenge that argument--then we must return to the original
question:
 
            How do journalists define democracy?  It is a question for which
there
 
            does not appear to be an easy answer.  For example, Herbert Gans has
 
          noted that American journalists are tied to the ideals of the
 
   Progressive movement, or what he calls "altruistic democracy" (pp.
 
        43-45).  Still, Gans seems to be identifying less a theory of democracy
 
            or a way to structure society and more an ideology or dominant
belief
 
           system (p. 68).
        This paper is an attempt to begin the discussion of what theory or
 
         theories of democracy are at the heart of American journalism.
 
     Underlying this paper is the belief that without a clear understanding
 
            of the democratic principles that guide the practice of journalism,
we
 
            cannot possibly understand the press's role in the realization of
 
       democracy.  This paper highlights four theories of democracy and
 
      discusses their implications for the practice of journalism.  There are,
 
            of course, more than four theories of democracy.  It is hoped that
the
 
            exploration of these theories will serve as the starting point for a
 
          broader discussion of the connection between theories of democracy and
 
            the practice of journalism.
The Importance of Democratic Theory
        If theories of democracy are to aid in the practice of journalism,
 
         those theories must have some practical applications.  In many
respects,
 
            those applications are already present in the judgments and
decisions
 
           editors and reporters make on a daily basis.  Theories of democracy
are,
 of course, not discussed in any formal way in newsrooms across the
 
         United States.  Still, it is important to realize that the ideas that
 
           stand behind many current-day practices have links to theories of
 
       democracy.  These theories, much like the practices themselves, often go
 
            unquestioned in the hectic pace of day-to-day journalism.
        This paper will focus on four modern theories of democracy and attempt
 
            to demonstrate their relevance for understanding the practice of
 
      journalism.  The four theories that will be addressed in this paper are:
 
            competitive democracy, pluralist democracy, deliberative democracy,
and
 
            participatory democracy. All tell us something about the formation
of
 
           public life in the United States and the press' role in that
formation.
        Understanding the relationship between the press and public life is
 
          central to understanding the importance  of democratic theory.  James
 
          Carey calls "the public" the "god-term" of American journalism.  As he
 
            writes:
 
        The press justifies itself in the name of the public:   It exists--or so
 
            it is regularly said--to inform the         public, to serve as the
extended
 
           eyes and ears of the         public, to protect the public's right to know,
to
 
            serve       the public interest (Carey, p. 5).
        J rgen Habermas has called the press the public sphere's preeminent
 
          institution, giving life to the rational public discourse so important
 
            to the formation of democracy (1989, p. 181).  Still, while there is
 
          much discourse about the press-public connection, there is little
 
       discussion of it in terms of democratic theory.  This paper suggests
 
          that the link to democratic theory can be found by looking at the
 
       distinction between an informed public and an active public.  As Carey
 
            suggests, current press practices are closely aligned with the idea
of
 
            an informed public.  An informed public can be defined as a group of
 
          people who are isolated and inactive, but nonetheless informed about
 
          political life by society's institutions.  Individualism, not
community,
 
            is at the core of an informed public.  It is concerned with
protecting
 
            the rights of individuals to receive information.  The citizen in an
 
          informed public achieves her or his goals in relative isolation,
 
      requiring only the aid of information-providing institutions.
        An active public, on the other hand, assumes a very different type of
 
            citizen.  At its center is the creation of community.  It requires
or is
 
            constituted by citizens who are active in political life, who
possess a
 
            shared sense of community.  Definitions of an active public can be
found
 
            in the work of scholars such as John Dewey and Herbert Blumer.  As
 
        Blumer wrote in 1946:
 
        The term public is used to refer to a group of people   (a) who are
 
         confronted by an issue, (b) who are divided    in their ideas as to how
to
 
            meet the issue, and (c) who         engage in discussion over the issue (p.
46)
        An active public, then, has developed or is in the process of
 
    developing avenues that will make that sense of community a reality.
 
           Acting is primarily a social activity and a central part of political
 
           life, requiring other members of society to make that action
relevant.
 
            As Hannah Arendt writes, a life without speech and action "is
literally
 
            dead to the world; it has ceased to be a human life" because it no
 
        longer has ties to community (p. 176).
        Of course, most theories of democracy are neither entirely based on an
 
            informed public nor an active public. Still, the informed-active
 
      distinction serves as an effective way to organize the discussion of
 
          various theories of democracy.  As such, the four theories that will
be
 
            the focus of this paper can be placed on a continuum, as in Figure
A.
        The theories can be viewed as providing an increased emphasis on public
 
            participation as one moves along the continuum from an informed to
 
        active public.  In that regard, both the competitive and pluralist
 
        theories are forms of what some might call elitist theories of
 
    democracy.
 
 
Figure A
 
Theories of Democracy
Informed-Active Public Continuum
 
  Informed                                         Active
  Public                                           Public
 
 
 
 
 
      Competitive            Deliberative
           .                      .
           .    Pluralism         .      Participatory
           .        .             .             .
           .        .             .             .
           ..........             ...............
               .                         .
               .                         .
            Elitist               Community-based
          Theories of               Theories of
           Democracy                 Democracy
 
 
That is, the emphasis is less on public participation by citizens and
 
           more on the administration of society by qualified elites or
 
  organizations.  The major question for society is how those elites are
 
            elected or those organizations formed.  On the other hand,
deliberative
 
            and participatory theories are community-based theories, attempting
to
 
            find ways to involve the public in decision-making.  The major
question
 
            is what kinds of avenues need to be created to allow members of the
 
         public to participate in their own governance.
        What follows is a brief description of the four theories in Figure A.
 
            Each will highlight some of the basic assumptions made by various
 
       theorists in that area.
 
Competitive
        Competitive democratic theory is an attempt to reconcile democratic
 
          theory with the realities of modern life.  The roots of the theory can
 
            be traced to the work of Max Weber and Joseph Schumpeter.  Working
 
        separately, they painted a picture of modern society where social forces
 
            have become so overwhelming that they leave little chance for
 
   participation by citizens.  They tell of a time when political
 
    participation amounts to little more than, as Held puts it, "choosing
 
           decision-makers and curbing their excesses"(p. 143).
        Weber's critique of society concentrates on the rationalization of
 
         capitalist production.  Weber argues that as modern society has
 
     progressed, life has increasingly been rationalized, that is, turned
 
          over to scientific procedures that emphasize the role of experts and
 
          technology.  The growth of the bureaucracy accompanied this process,
 
          spreading not only to the government but also to industry and
political
 
            parties.  Agreeing with Marx, Weber found the bureaucracy to be
 
     inherently undemocratic because bureaucrats were no longer responsible
 
            to the electorate (Held, pp. 147-148).  Thus, rationalization
created a
 
            tension among modern people: it freed people from the "mysterious
 
       incalculable forces" of premodern society and, in turn, meant that
 
        people could "master all things by calculation" (Weber, p. 139).
        Weber was bothered by the impractical nature of
the role of experts and technology.  He believed that in modern society,
 
            the best that could be accomplished was the election of powerful,
wise
 
            leaders.  In the words of Gerth and Mills:
 
        For Weber, the universal franchise, the struggle for    votes, and the
 
           freedom of organization had no value         unless they resulted in
powerful
 
            political leaders   willing to assume responsibility rather than
evade it
        and cover up their deeds behind court cliques and       imperial bureaucrats
 
            . . . (p. 38).
        Where would those leaders come from?  One of the areas was from within
 
            the ranks of journalism (Hardt, p. 165).  The press, in Weber's
eyes,
 
           was to play more than a formative role in the creation of a just
 
      society, it was also to adopt a leadership role (Weber, pp. 96-99).
 
          Weber, who worked as a journalist, viewed newspapers as playing an
 
        increasingly important role in social and political change in society
 
           and fretted over the press's fascination with sensationalism and
 
      commercialism (Weber, p. 98).
        Schumpeter brought many of Weber's ideas together into an actual theory
 
            of democracy.  The Austrian-born economist popularized many of
Weber's
 
            ideas and his writings provided the foundation for many studies by
 
        social scientists in the post-World War II years (Held, pp. 164-165).
 
            First and foremost, Schumpeter set out to put aside once and for all
the
 
            idea that democracy means "the people" rule.  The only real meaning
of
 
            democracy for Schumpeter was "that people have the opportunity of
 
       accepting or refusing the men who are to rule them" (Schumpeter, pp.
 
          284-285).  In his view, classic democratic theory granted an
"altogether
 
            unrealistic degree of initiative" in political affairs and virtually
 
          ignored the question of political leadership (Schumpeter, p. 270).
        For Schumpeter, democracy is reduced to little more than citizens
 
        deciding who will govern them.  It is through voting, and the
 
   competition for votes between political elites, that government
 
     generates its legitimacy.  His theory calls for high-caliber po
 
    liticians, a well-trained bureaucracy, competition between rival leaders
 
            and parties, and a society that will support differences in opinion
 
         (Held, p. 176).
        In the end, competitive democratic theory emphasizes an informed public
 
            in the sense that it gives less responsibility to citizens.  It puts
the
 
            responsibility to inform and legislate in the hands of a certain
 
      community--a community of elites.
Pluralist
        While competitive theorists seek to put power in the hands of elected
 
            elites, pluralist theorists envision modern democracy in broader
terms.
 
            For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 
       Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
       numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are perhaps best illustrated in the work of Robert Dahl,
 
           who focuses his work on interest or pressure groups.  For Dahl, these
 
           factions are viewed as being the key to the proper functioning of
 
       democracy as we know it.  It is the diversification of power among thest
 
            theorists envision modern democracy in broader terms.  For
pluralists,
 
            democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.  Modern,
pluralistic
 
           democracy envisions the give and take between numerous groups and
 
       organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are st theorists envision modern democracy in broader
 
        terms.  For pluralists, democracy is more than simply selecting leaders.
 Modern, pluralistic democracy envisions the give and take between
 
        numerous groups and organizations in society.
        These ideas are  publicly formulate their ideas about the very issues
 
            upon which they might someday vote.  Barber's hope is that through
 
        interaction with other members of the community, new ideas and options
 
            will be constructed.
        William M. Sullivan has also called for a new public philosophy
 
      emphasizing "active citizenship and enlightened discussion" (p. xii).
 
            The goal for Sullivan is to revitalize civic association by
 
 strengthening what he calls "intermediate structures" (p. 225).
 
      Sullivan writes:
 
        The process must invite the enclaves of neighborly      cooperation out
 
          from their present defensive position         on the periphery of our public
 
           life, to join in a   larger effort to transform the mainstream
 
   institution  into vehicles and expression of citizenly fellowship    (pp.
 
            224-225).
        One way of achieving that goal might be through the creation of what
 
           Sara Evans and Harry Boyte call "free spaces," or "settings between
 
         private lives and large-scale institutions where ordinary citizens can
 
            act with dignity, independence, and vision."  For Evans and Boyte,
it is
 
            important to note that these so-called free spaces are not a place
where
 
            citizens merely increase their knowledge, but rather a place where
they
 
            transform that knowledge into action (p. 17).
        Of course, the utopian nature of participatory democracy can be
 
      questioned.  But Evans and Boyte attempt to show through an historical
 
            examination how free spaces have functioned in the United States.
And,
 
            as Sullivan notes, the fact that some social movements have
continued to
 
            emerge in modern society "is evidence of the civic republican
spirit"
 
           (p. 221).
Democratic Theory and Journalism
        The descriptions of four basic theories of democracy, brief as they
 
          are, are intended to highlight some of the assumptions behind the
 
       generic term democracy.  Adopting the assumptions of a certain theory
 
           can influence how society is viewed and ultimately the practices of
 
         institutions within society.  As Barber notes, each theory of political
 
            life assumes a starting point, and that starting point is central to
 
          determining where we end up (p. 26).
        The following is an attempt to offer some suggestions as to how the
 
          various theories might influence the practice of one of the central
 
         institutions in democracy--the press.
Elitist Models
        Elitist models differ from community-based models in the primary
 
       respect that they adopt different views on the role of citizens in
 
        society.  Elitist models have little faith that people can or want to
 
           participate in public affairs.  In that regard, the individual
citizen
 
            is often viewed as being isolated from the community, frequently
acting
 
            in only his or her self-interest.
        Those assumptions are often at the foundation of many developments and
 
            practices within the industry.  The idea of the isolated individual
can
 
            be seen in the work of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute
of
 
            Technology (MIT) and its attempt to create the "Ultra-personal
 
    Newspaper," or what some have called "The Daily Me" (Brand; Conniff).
 
           The project is driven by the desire to provide individuals with
 
     personalized information--information that caters to the needs of
 
       individuals, but does little to promote the formation of community.
 
          Theories of democracy based on the idea of an informed public provide
 
           the justification for such developments.
        Many current press practices reflect on that view of the citizen.
 
         Perhaps foremost among them is the press's professionalization
movement.
 In many ways, this movement is an attempt to separate the press from
 
           the public.  The press is put forward as reporting on a community,
but
 
            remaining apart from that community (Hallin).  The press collects
 
       information as the public's representative, passes that information
 
         along to society, but then separates itself from how that information
is
 
            used (Tuchman, pp. 90-91).  As Ted Koppel recently told members of
the
 
            American Society of Newspaper Editors, "Our role as journalists is
to
 
           hold up the light.  I am most uncomfortable with the notion that we
 
         should consider the consequences of what we report" (Davidson).
        The idea that the press should stand apart from the public, leading
 
          unmotivated citizens, has a long history in modern press theory.
 
       Perhaps the clearest articulation of this idea can be found in the
 
        social responsibility theory of the press, a theory that had its roots
 
            in the work of the Commission on Freedom of the Press (commonly
referred
 
            to as the Hutchins Commission) in 1947.  Following in the steps of
 
        Progressive reformers, social responsibility theory puts its faith in
 
           educated, enlightened individuals to lead society.  The development
of
 
            that elite can be achieved through the professionalization of
journalism
 
            (see Peterson).
        This pessimistic view of society is evident in the writings of some of
 
            the members of the Commission.  Zechariah Chafee, Jr., at one point
 
         concludes that "men are animals" and that "the public will never live
up
 
            to the kind of newspaper which this commission would like to have"
 
        (quoted in McIntyre, p. 147). And William E. Hocking, perhaps the
 
       philosophical guiding force of the Commission, notes that it has become
 
            apparent over the years that citizens "do not know what they want in
any
 
            socially reliable way" (quoted in McIntyre, p. 148).
        Hocking clung to the idea that in the press could be found the answer
 
            to the problem.  As Hocking writes, since the public might not know
what
 
            to expect from its press, it is up to the press to provide
instruction;
 
            "the press can educate demand" (p. 199). Theodore Peterson, in his
 
        articulation of social responsibility theory, notes that it is not so
 
           much that people are no longer rational, but rather that they are
 
       "lethargic."  As Peterson writes, "Because of his mental sloth, man has
 
            fallen into a state of unthinking conformity, to which his inertia
binds
 
            him" (p. 100).  Or as one journalist of the 1940s put it, "The
public
 
           prefers not to think" (Miller, p. 2).
        Elitist theories question the rationality of citizens and provide the
 
            justification for a professional institution--the press--to take up
the
 
            duties and responsibilities of the public.  The primary purpose of
the
 
            press is not to activate citizens, but rather to inform them about
the
 
            day's events.  Knowledge about an issue comes to replace political
 
        action.  Being informed becomes the highest level for a citizen to
 
        attain.
        Also contained in elitist theories is the justification for focusing
 
           press coverage on important people and institutions in society.  If
 
         democracy is truly little more than the competition between elites, be
 
            it national or local organizations, it is only natural for the press
to
 
            focus its attention on those elites.  Various studies of journalism
have
 
            noted American journalism's focus on elites (Bennett, pp. 69-102;
 
       Fishman, pp. 85-108; Gans, pp. 8-38; Tuchman, pp. 82-89).  Under elitist
 
            theories of democracy, informing voters about the actions of those
 
        groups would seem to be the primary role for the press to play in
 
       society.
        In that regard, the press's fascination with horse-race coverage of
 
          elections might also find support in these theories.  In elitist
 
      theories, members of the public are not expected to participate in the
 
            substantive discussion of issues, but rather to make decisions about
who
 
            they would like to hold power for the next several years.  Voting is
put
 
            forward as the essential element of democracy.  In that context,
 
      focusing on elites through stories about who is doing what to whom and
 
            who is winning the political battles inside the "beltway" is a
logical
 
            way to organize news coverage.  The goal of the press in elitist
 
      theories is to provide the necessary information to citizens so that
 
          they will be able to make educated decisions at the ballot box and
 
        nothing more.
        The difference between the two kinds of elitist theories is, in the
 
          end, a matter of degree.  Rather than the press focusing on elites
such
 
            as politicians as in competitive democratic theory, pluralist
democratic
 
            theory turns its focus to groups and institutions within society
that
 
           are not necessarily governmental.  Still, the primary function of the
 
           press remains the same--to provide information to citizens who are
 
        generally not living up to expectations.
Community-based Models
        Gans has argued that there are at least two reasons why journalists
 
          support what has been termed here as elitist theories of democracy:
(1)
 
            journalists fear that an empowered audience will threaten their
 
     autonomy, and (2) that "cultural democratization" will force journalists
 
            to pay less attention to upper and upper-middle-class sources (p.
248).
 
            As portrayed in Figure A, elitist theories tend to be more
supportive of
 
            maintaining the status quo of an informed public.  As such, the
question
 
            that is foremost for the citizen is: Of what benefit is this
information
 
            to me?  If the discussion of democracy and the practices of the
press
 
           begins at the other end of the continuum, the question changes.  The
 
          question that is at the center of community-based theories of
democracy
 
            is: Of what benefit is this for activating the community?
        Under community-based theories, the Media Lab's experiments with the
 
           personal newspaper would be viewed with skepticism.  The goal of a
press
 
            operating under community-based democracy would be to allow
individuals
 
            to share information and to aid in the formation of an active
community.
 From that perspective, an individualized newspaper is of little help in
 
            attaining that end.  It does not serve to bring people together, but
 
          rather to isolate them.
        The role of the press under theories linked with an active public would
 
            vary.  In deliberative democracy, the press reserves a powerful,
 
      institutional presence in society.  However, its goal is not merely
 
         informing citizens, but rather finding creative ways to activate them.
 
            Citizenship is not seen as replacing institutions or
representatives,
 
           but providing direction to the decisions that are made by those
 
     institutions and representatives.  On the other hand, participatory
 
         democracy is an attempt to find a way to give citizens more voice in
the
 
            operation of society's institutions and businesses.  The citizen's
role
 
            is not that of an advisor, as in deliberative democracy, but rather
that
 
            of an active participant.  Both, however, take seriously the need
for
 
           the press to find ways to not only inform citizens, but to activate
 
         citizens.  The press needs to identify ways that it can aid in the
 
        creation of those "free spaces" discussed by Evans and Boyte.
        What role does the press play in securing these free spaces?  Attempts
 
            have been made to create a sense of community.  As might be expected
 
          because its basic ideas are often viewed as being less radical, more
 
          examples of deliberative democracy exist than participatory democracy.
 
            Examples that could be considered as forms of deliberative democracy
are
 
            the naming of local citizens to the editorial board of the Ventura,
 
         Calif., Star-Free Press or the Charlotte, N.C., Observer's
            "consumer-oriented campaign news."  At the Star-Free Press, the
public
 
            members of the editorial board provide input on various issues, but
the
 
            editor and/or editorial page editor retain control over the final
 
       decisions (Stein, p. 20).  The Observer has attempted to find ways to
 
           involve readers in shaping the paper's political coverage, especially
in
 
            the types of stories that are selected.  A "citizen's agenda" was
put
 
           together based on the responses of 1,000 residents.  Those responses,
 
           along with the input of a citizen's panel were then used to guide
 
       coverage (Public Life and the Press, pp. 7-9).
        Each of these efforts, and others like them, aid in the creation of a
 
            deliberating public.  They break away from the horse-race mentality
and
 
            aid in the creation of active citizens.  While clearly a step
towards
 
           the development of community, the efforts fall short of meeting the
 
         needs of a participatory democracy.  Perhaps the largest distinction
 
          between the two can be found in the role of the institutional press.
 
           Under participatory theory, the role of the press is not to retain
final
 
            control over opinions or ideas that are ultimately printed, nor is
it to
 
            select representatives who reflect public opinion.  In that regard,
the
 
            Charlotte Observer when it conducted its preliminary poll used to
create
 
            the "citizen's agenda" was measuring individual opinion, not public
 
         opinion, as defined by Blumer and Dewey.  True public opinion can only
 
            be created when citizens are able to come together, debate issues
and
 
           listen to others' ideas.  Asking someone whether they favor the death
 
           penalty is not the measurement of public opinion, but rather it is
 
        asking someone for his or her individual opinion.  It ignores the fact
 
            that most people's opinions change when they are exposed to counter
 
         arguments and ideas.  Truly public opinion, then, can only be created
 
           through a freewheeling discussion.
        A press that is looking for the creation of true public opinion is less
 
            concerned about the control of ideas and instead focuses on the
creation
 
            of avenues that will allow that public opinion to develop.  The
 
     Star-Tribune's efforts in Minneapolis, Minn., to create neighborhood
 
          discussion groups, or what some have called salons, can be viewed as
an
 
            attempt at participatory democracy (Public Life and the Press, pp.
 
        18-19).  The newspaper's main mission is activating and energizing the
 
            discussion among citizens.  Other than suggesting possible
discussion
 
           topics, which apparently the groups are under no obligation to
follow,
 
            the newspaper does not get involved in controlling the discussion or
the
 
            results.
        It seems clear that some elements of participatory  democracy would
 
          call for the press to surrender at least some editorial control.  For
 
           example, John Keane's call for a public service media entails that
 
        "communications media should be for the public use and enjoyment of all
 
            citizens and not for the private gain or profit of political rulers
or
 
            businesses" (p. 127).
        The Star-Tribune's attempt, however, demonstrates that perhaps there
 
           are avenues short of giving up complete fiscal and editorial control.
 
            Other avenues that would aid in the creation of community are
available
 
            as well.  As journalism professor James Lemert writes, the American
 
         press does a very poor job of providing what he calls "mobilizing
 
       information" (Lemert, pp. 243-249).  In other words, the press is very
 
            good at telling its readers what action the city council has taken,
but
 
            it is very poor at telling citizens what the council is going to do,
 
          what citizens can do about it, or how to go about it.  Such minor
shifts
 
            in the focus of reporting, what might be called changing from
reactive
 
            to proactive journalism, could provide an important spark for the
 
       formation of community life.
Conclusion
        It is a common complaint that attempts to put theory into practice can
 
            often be a frustrating, if not futile, endeavor.  Journalists need
to
 
           realize that many of their practices already have links with
democratic
 
            theory and, because of that link, the connection between theory and
 
         practice cannot be ignored.  Still, the basic question of what
 
    journalists mean by the term democracy goes unaddressed.  Before the
 
          press can begin to address the problems of the day, it needs to
address
 
            a basic question: What role is the press supposed to play in
society?
 
            If the answer is informing citizens, current practices with links to
 
          theories of democratic elitism might be adequate.  However, if the
 
        press's role is viewed as activating as well as informing citizens, more
 
            innovative strategies are needed.  A press based on the idea of
 
     community would take seriously a suggestion made by Dewey in 1927.  The
 
            great problem for democracy, Dewey wrote, is not ignorance, but
rather
 
            the lack of opportunities for public deliberation (pp. 208-210).
Dewey's
 
            concern continues today.
 
References
 
Arendt, H. (1958).  The Human Condition (Chicago: University    of Chicago
 
            Press).
 
Barber, B. (1984).  Strong Democracy: Participatory Politics
        for a New Age (Berkeley: University of California
        Press).
 
Blumer, H. (1966).  "The Mass, the Public, and Public   Opinion," in
 
         Reader in Public Opinion and   Communication, 2d ed., eds. B. Berelson
 
           and M.
        Janowitz (New York: Free Press): 43-50
 
Bohman, J. (1994).  "Complexity, Pluralism, and the     Constitutional
 
         State: On Habermas's Faktizitat und    Geltung," Law and Society Review,
 
            vol. 28, no. 4: 897-        930.
 
Brand, S. (1987).  The Media Lab: Inventing the Future at       MIT (New
 
         York: Viking).
 
Carey, J. (1989). "The Press and the Public Discourse," The     Center
 
         Magazine, vol. 20, no. 2: 264-282.
 
Cohen, J. (1989).  "Deliberation and Democratic Legitimacy."
        In The Good Polity, eds. A. Hamlin and P. Pettit (New   York: Oxford):
 
            pp. 17-34.
 
Conniff, M. (1993).  "Future Tense," Editor & Publisher,        Oct. 16: 3,
 
           39.
 
Dahl, R.A. (1956).  A Preface to Democratic Theory (Chicago:    University
 
            of Chicago Press).
 
----- (1967).  Pluralist Democracy in the United States:        Conflict and
 
            Consent (Chicago: Rand McNally).
 
----- (1985).  A Preface to Economic Democracy (Cambridge:      Polity
 
        Press).
 
Davidson, J. (1994).  "Newspaper editors ask: after you         report the
 
         genocide, then what?" Chicago Tribune, April   17: 14.
 
Dewey, J. (1927).  The Public and Its Problems (Chicago:        Swallow
 
       Press).
 
Evans, S.M., and H.C. Boyte (1986).  Free Spaces: The
        Sources of Democratic Change in America (New York:
        Harper & Row).
 
Fishkin, J.S. (1991).  Democracy and Deliberation: New
        Directions for Democratic Reform (New Haven: Yale
        University Press).
 
Fishman, M. (1988).  Manufacturing the News (Austin:    University of
 
         Texas Press).
 
Gans, H.J. (1980). Deciding What's News (New York: Vintage      Books).
 
Habermas, J. (1995).  Between Facts and Norms: Contributions    to a
 
        Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy, trans. W.        Rehg (Cambridge,
 
        Mass.: MIT Press).
 
----- (1992).  "Further Reflections on the Public Sphere, in    Habermas
 
            and the Public Sphere, ed. C. Calhoun       (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT
Press):
 
           421-461.
 
----- (1989).  The Structural Transformation of the Public      Sphere,
 
         trans. T. Burger (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press).
 
Hallin, D.C. (1985).  "The American News Media: A Critical      Theory
 
        Perspective," in Critical Theory and Public     Life, ed. J. Forester
 
        (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press):  121-146.
 
Hardt, H. (1979).  Social Theories of the Press (Beverly        Hills, Calif.:
 
            SAGE).
 
Held, D. (1987).  Models of Democracy (Stanford, Calif.:
        Stanford University Press).
 
Hocking, W.E. (1947).  Freedom of the Press: A Framework in     Principle
 
            (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).
 
Keane, J. (1991).  The Media and Democracy (Cambridge,  Mass.: Polity
 
           Press).
 
Lemert, J. (1984).  "News Context and the Elimination of        Mobilizing
 
          Information: An Experiment," Journalism       Quarterly, vol. 61, no. 2:
 
         243-249, 259.
 
Lippmann, W. (1922).  Public Opinion (New York: Free Press).
 
McIntyre, J.S. (1987).  "Repositioning a Landmark: The  Hutchins
 
      Commission and Freedom of the Press," Critical    Studies in Mass
 
     Communication, vol. 4: 136-160.
 
Miller, W.J. (1947).  "What's Wrong With The Newspaper  Reader?" Nieman
 
            Reports, vol. 1, no. 1: 2.
 
Peterson, T. (1956).  "The Social Responsibility Theory of      the Press,"
 
            in Four Theories of the Press (Urbana:      University of Illinois
Press):
 
            73-103.
 
Public Life and the Press: A Research Report (1994).  New       York: New
 
          York University, Project for Public Life and  the Press.
 
Schumpeter, J.A. (1947).  Capitalism, Socialism, and    Democracy, 2d ed.
 
            (New York: Harper & Brothers).
 
Stein, M.L. (1994).  "Paper praises citizen editorial board     members,"
 
            Editor & Publisher, April 30: 20.
 
Sullivan, W. (1986).  Reconstructing Public Philosophy  (Berkeley:
 
        University of California Press).
 
Tuchman, G. (1978).  Making News: A Study in the        Construction of
 
       Reality (New York: The Free Press).
 
Weber, M. (1958).  From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology, eds.    H.H. Gerth
 
            and C. W. Mills (New York: Oxford   University Press).
 
 [1]  Research for this project was supported by a grant from The Projec
t on Public Life
 and the Press,  The John S. and James L. Knight Founda
tion, and the Kettering
 
         Foundation.

Back to: Top of Message | Previous Page | Main AEJMC Page

Permalink



LIST.MSU.EDU

CataList Email List Search Powered by the LISTSERV Email List Manager