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News frames and national security : covering big brother / Douglas M. McLeod, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Dhavan V. Shah, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

By: Contributor(s): Series: Communication, society and politicsPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2015Description: 1 online resource (xv, 220 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781139022200 (ebook)
Other title:
  • News frames & national security
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 302.230973 23
LOC classification:
  • P95.82.U6 M384 2015
Online resources:
Contents:
Preface : The Story of this Book -- Understanding Message Framing and Effects -- Framing Surveillance and the War on Terror -- Designing the Studies (with Lucy Atkinson, Seungahn Nah, and Hyunseo Hwang) -- Converging Cues and the Spread of Activation (with Jaeho Cho and Homero Gil de Zuniga) -- Cognitive Complexity and Attitude Structure (with Hyunseo Hwang, Jaeho Cho, Seungahn Nah, and Nam-Jin Lee) -- Security Concerns and Tolerance Judgments (with Heejo Keum and Hernando Rojas) -- Group Perceptions and Expressive Action (with Michael G. Schmierbach, Michael P. Boyle, and Cory L. Armstrong) -- Covering "Big Brother" -- Appendix A: Measurement Details for Arab Study -- Appendix B: Measurement Details for Response Latency -- Appendix C: Measurement Details for Activist Study: Closed-ended Responses -- Appendix D: Measurement Details for Activist Study: Open-ended Responses.
Summary: Did media coverage contribute to Americans' tendency to favor national security over civil liberties following the 9/11 attacks? How did news framing of terrorist threats support the expanding surveillance state revealed by Edward Snowden? Douglas M. McLeod and Dhavan V. Shah explore the power of news coverage to render targeted groups suspicious and to spur support for government surveillance. They argue that the tendency of journalists to frame stories around individual targets of surveillance - personifying the domestic threat - shapes citizens' judgments about tolerance and participation, leading them to limit the civil liberties of a range of groups under scrutiny and to support 'Big Brother'.
Item type: eBooks
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).

Preface : The Story of this Book -- Understanding Message Framing and Effects -- Framing Surveillance and the War on Terror -- Designing the Studies (with Lucy Atkinson, Seungahn Nah, and Hyunseo Hwang) -- Converging Cues and the Spread of Activation (with Jaeho Cho and Homero Gil de Zuniga) -- Cognitive Complexity and Attitude Structure (with Hyunseo Hwang, Jaeho Cho, Seungahn Nah, and Nam-Jin Lee) -- Security Concerns and Tolerance Judgments (with Heejo Keum and Hernando Rojas) -- Group Perceptions and Expressive Action (with Michael G. Schmierbach, Michael P. Boyle, and Cory L. Armstrong) -- Covering "Big Brother" -- Appendix A: Measurement Details for Arab Study -- Appendix B: Measurement Details for Response Latency -- Appendix C: Measurement Details for Activist Study: Closed-ended Responses -- Appendix D: Measurement Details for Activist Study: Open-ended Responses.

Did media coverage contribute to Americans' tendency to favor national security over civil liberties following the 9/11 attacks? How did news framing of terrorist threats support the expanding surveillance state revealed by Edward Snowden? Douglas M. McLeod and Dhavan V. Shah explore the power of news coverage to render targeted groups suspicious and to spur support for government surveillance. They argue that the tendency of journalists to frame stories around individual targets of surveillance - personifying the domestic threat - shapes citizens' judgments about tolerance and participation, leading them to limit the civil liberties of a range of groups under scrutiny and to support 'Big Brother'.

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