议程设置、公众舆论和移民改革问题

J. Dunaway, Marisa A. Abrajano, Regina Branton
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引用次数: 215

摘要

目标。议程设置理论被用来激发关于媒体对移民的报道如何影响公众对其重要性的看法的假设。作者试图通过探索移民新闻在边境和非边境国家的影响差异,对公众对移民的看法提供一个更完整的解释。方法。本文采用了对12个月(2006年1月至12月)期间报纸移民报道和盖洛普民意数据的内容分析。受访者认为移民是一个“最重要的问题”,并将其建模为边境州/非边境州居住与媒体报道、种族背景和个人层面人口统计之间的条件关系。结果。媒体对边境州移民问题的关注要大于非边境州;因此,与非边境州的居民相比,边境州的居民更有可能将移民视为最重要的问题。结论。分析指出地理位置和新闻报道在解释公众对移民的看法方面的重要性。传统上,居住在与墨西哥接壤的州和居住在非边境州的公众对移民的态度是不同的。现存的调查研究,主要关注盎格鲁人的态度(阿尔瓦雷斯和巴特菲尔德,2000;Johnson, Stein, and Wrinkle, 2003)的研究表明,与居住在非边境州的个人相比,居住在边境州的个人始终将移民视为“国家面临的最重要问题”之一。然而,随着2006年全国媒体对移民改革的关注和全国范围内的移民抗议浪潮的激增,民意调查显示,全国公众对移民的看法飙升至
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Agenda Setting, Public Opinion, and the Issue of Immigration Reform
Objective. Agenda-setting theory is used to motivate hypotheses about how media coverage of immigration influences public perceptions of its importance. The authors seek to offer a more complete explanation of public opinion on immigration by exploring differences in the effects of immigration news in border and nonborder states. Method. This article employs content analyses of newspaper coverage of immigration and Gallup public opinion data over a 12-month period (January‐ December 2006). Respondents’ identification of immigration as a ‘‘Most Important Problem’’ is modeled as a conditional relationship between border state/nonborder state residence and media coverage, ethnic context, and individual-level demographics. Results. Media attention to immigration is greater in border states than in nonborder states; as a result, residents of border states are more likely to identify immigration as a most important problem than are residents of nonborder states. Conclusions. The analyses point to the importance of geography and news coverage in explanations of public opinion on immigration. The public’s attitude toward immigration has traditionally been different for those residing in states that share a border with Mexico and those living in nonborder states. Extant survey research, which focuses primarily on Anglo attitudes (Alvarez and Buttereld, 2000; Johnson, Stein, and Wrinkle, 2003), reveals that individuals residing in border states consistently rate immigration as one of the ‘‘most important problems facing the nation,’’ relative to individuals residing in nonborder states. However, immediately following the 2006 spike in national media attention toward immigration reform and the wave of immigration protests nationwide, public opinion polls revealed that national public opinion regarding immigration surged to
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