Entman, robert

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Framing Politics in the Media: Academic Thinking Robert M. Entman J.B. and M.C. Shapiro Professor School of Media and Public Affairs The George Washington University 2010 ACOP Conference Bilbao, Spain

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El framing desde la Academia.

Transcript of Entman, robert

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Framing Politics in the Media:Academic Thinking

Robert M. EntmanJ.B. and M.C. Shapiro Professor

School of Media and Public AffairsThe George Washington University

2010 ACOP ConferenceBilbao, Spain

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Framing defined

Selecting a few facets of perceived realityand connecting them in a narrative thatpromotes one interpretation

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Chong and Druckman (2007) summarizeacademic research on framing in politics• [R]eview suggests that it is possible for

people to have the kind of firm, full, andarticulate opinions that … are lesssusceptible to manipulation and framingeffects. Deliberation, discussion,exposure to information and to a range ofalternative arguments raises the quality ofopinion by reducing ambivalence andsteadying one’s preferences. People whoare better informed … are less likely to beswayed by how other people frame theissues for them.

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Toward a more political theory of framing

• Politically, it matters less what“people” in general “can” do thanwhat those with malleable opinionswill do.

• Academic research focuses largelyon individual-level effects. Theunderlying assumptions:–Elites can aggregate individual

opinions into a true “public opinion”–Elites want to or must respond to

public opinion

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•In fact, elites compete to manage publicopinion and exercise power, not to informcitizens or promote democracy.

•Specific media rarely make “a range ofalternative arguments” easily accessible;nor do many individuals seek this.

•Researchers must understand creation,circulation and effects of frames at everylevel of the political communication system,and across time.

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A Political Theory of Framing & Power• Framing at levels from:

– the political communicators (officials) to– media communicators (journalists) to– communicating texts (news reports,

editorials, “fake news”) to the– public

• At each level, information is processedaccording to actors’ decision-makingbiases and existing schemas.

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Power

• Definition: getting people to behaveas an actor wishes

• Successful framing influences peopleto think & feel as the actor prefers;encourages them to act accordingly

• Framing therefore an important tool ofpolitical power

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Slanted Framing

Characterizes communications thatframe an issue, political actor orevent in ways that favor one sideover others in a current or potentialdispute over government policy.

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Goal of elite political communication:

•Consistently slanted framingacross time and levels ofcommunication.•Promotes the ability of an actor toprevail over opponents in policydisputes.

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Research shows:

• Slanted, one-sided framing depends oninteractions:– Political skill of contending parties x media

decision-making heuristics x (usuallydebatable) facts

• Interactions can help or hurt differentparties and leaders depending onsituation.

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“Facts”

Government skill

Opposition Skill

Market Heuristics

Watchdog Heuristics

Ideological Bias

Random chance

One-sided NewsFraming

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Media heuristics

• Market: Audience asconsumers– Simplification– Symbolization– Stereotyped novelty

• Watchdog: Audienceas citizens– Popularity– Power

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Understanding Slanted News:Republicans vs. Democrats 2008

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Early Coverage Slants Heavily TowardsRepublicans, Mainly Because of Palin

ABC World News and NBC Nightly News Aug 24-Sept 13

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Different Skill Levels: Democrats Slanted News AgainstThemselves, Republicans For Themselves

Sources of praiseand criticism

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Cascading Frame Activation: Initial Palin News

Level 1:Culture

Levels 2 &3:Elites and Media

Level 4: Communications

Level 5: Public Opinion

Time – 1: Palin in obscurity Time 2: Opposition famingabsent, media receive oneframe, slant positive

Event at Time 1: Palinnominated & GOP skillfullyframes

Culture• Schemas in mindsof elites and publics• Frames inliterature, film,news, education

Communicator Networks•Elites’ strategic frames•Media’s non-strategicframes

Public Opinion Indicators• Non-strategic communication

•Polls, votes•Strategic framing

•Social movements, blogs

Frames

Frames

Frames

Communication Texts• News•Infotainment•Blogs/ Websites•F2F communication

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Cascading Activation 1 week

Level 1

Level 2 &3

Level 4

Level 5

T3 : Palin feedback initially positive, reflected inpositive polls, crowds, blogs

Culture• Schemas in mindsof elites and publics• Frames inliterature, film,news, education

Communicator Networks•Elites’ strategic frames•Media’s non-strategicframes

Public Opinion Indicators• Non StrategicCommunication

•Polls, votes•Strategic framing

•Social movementsblogs

Frames

Frames

Frames

Communication Texts• News•Infotainment•Blogs/ Websites•F2F communicationFrames

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Cascading Activation after 4 Weeks

Level 2

Level 4

Level 5

Time 4: Palin violates cultural standards: Dems & media challenge Repub frame; facts change

StrategicCommunicatorsElite Team A (REPUBS)

Public opinion Indicators• Non strategic framing

•Polls, votes•Strategic framing

•Social movements,blogs

Communication Texts• News•Infotainment•Blogs/ Websites•F2F communication

StrategicCommunicatorsElite Team B (DEMS)

Time 5: Feedback mixed, slant shifts

Level 3Media•NYT, WP, ABC, Time•McClatchy, LAT, Globe

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ECONOMIC CRISIS HITSSlant Turns Pro-Democratic

(ABC, Sept. 14-Nov. 3)

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Independent vote crucial

Party ID O b a m a M c C a i n O t h e r

Democrat (39%) 89% 10% 1%Republican (32%) 9% 90% 1%Independent (29%) 52% 44% 4%

Source: Gallup exit poll 2008

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Conclusion

•Facts matter, but framing matters more.•Much depends on skill of those competing todominate the media’s framing.•Skill=communicating in words, images andstyles congruent with media heuristics.•Media framing can help political leaders andparties, business and other interests at onetime, hurt them another, even with similar facts.