How Events Enter the Public Sphere: Conflict, Location, and Sponsorship in Local Newspaper Coverage of Public Events
American Journal of Sociology1999Vol. 105(1), pp. 38–87
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 1999 papers
Abstract
Protest events occur against the backdrop of public life. Of 382 public events in police records for one year in a small U.S. city, 45% convey a message, 14% involve social conflict, and 13% are standard protest event forms. Local newspapers covered 32% of all events, favoring events that were large, involved conflict, were sponsored by business groups, and occurred in central locations. The more liberal paper also favored rallies and events sponsored by national social movement organizations (SMOs) or recreational groups. Discussion centers on the ways these factors shape the content of the public sphere.
Related Papers
- Press and public: Who reads what, when, where, and why in American newspapers(1981)
- Newspapers, a reference guide(1987)
- LIANG Qi - chao and Modern Chinese Newspaper Industry(2003)
- A Re-consideration on Developing Shaanxi from a Newspaper Giant to a Newspaper Lord ——A Study of the Problem in Development of Shaanxi's Newspaper Industry and Its Policy(2001)
- On XU Teli's Editing Thought of Education Newspaper Edition(2011)