以色列最高法院的神话形象——一千个声音片段的死亡

Or Bassok
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引用次数: 1

摘要

世界范围内民主国家司法权力崛起的一个令人困惑的现象是,许多国家对这些本质上是反多数主义的机构给予了高度的公众支持。多年来,以色列一直是司法权力崛起的“证据”。然而,经过几十年公众对以色列最高法院的大力支持,自本世纪初以来,支持率急剧下降。根据1993年至1996年期间第一频道晚间新闻广播对以色列最高法院的电视报道的实证研究,我审查了试图解释这种下降的一个被忽视的因素:媒体对法院报道的变化。我指出,1993年第二个商业电视频道(第二频道)的出现对描述法院的方式产生了深远的影响。我利用定量和定性数据认为,由于商业媒体的需要所决定的报道模式,法院长期以来的神话形象在1993年开始崩溃。与将法院公众形象的变化完全归因于其法理发展的普遍说法相反,我认为报道法院的媒介的转变是法院公众形象转变的部分原因。随着信息娱乐的进入,电视不再继续将法院呈现为一个基于法律专业知识裁决案件的机构,而是越来越多地将法院塑造成一个基于意识形态甚至党派政治裁决案件的机构。
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The Israeli Supreme Court's Mythical Image – A Death of a Thousand Sound Bites
One of the perplexing phenomena in the rise of judicial power in democracies worldwide is the high level of public support given in many countries to these essentially contermajoritarian institutions. Israel has served for many years as “Exhibit A” in accounts of the rise of judicial power. Yet, following decades of strong public support for the Israeli Supreme Court, there has been a sharp decline since the beginning of this century. Based on an empirical study of television coverage of the Israeli Supreme Court on Channel One evening news broadcasts between 1993 and 1996, I examine a neglected factor in the attempts to explain this decline: the changing media coverage of the Court. I show that the entrance of a second, commercial television channel (Channel Two) in 1993 had a profound impact on the way the Court was depicted. Using both quantitative and qualitative data, I argue that, because of patterns of coverage dictated by the needs of commercial media, the Court’s long-standing mythical image started to crumble in 1993. Contrary to prevalent claims that attribute the change in the Court’s public image solely to developments in its jurisprudence, I show that a shift in the medium covering the Court is partly responsible for the shift in the Court’s public image. With the entrance of infotainment, rather than continuing to present the Court as an institution that decides cases based on legal expertise, television framed the Court more and more as an institution that decides cases based on ideology and even on partisan politics.
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