The role of media and public opinion in foreign policy February 13, 2014
Jan 02, 2016
Overview
Public opinion and foreign policy Media and foreign policy Procedural versus substantive criticism and
influence Media, public opinion, and theoretical
perspectives New technology and the ‘war on terror’
Public opinion, media and foreign policy
Not traditionally a lot of focus on media and public opinion in IR
More focus on foreign policy, but even here not traditionally a lot of focus
FP has tended to look at role of media through impact of societal groups on decision-making
Understanding foreign policy processes at the international level requires analysis of state-level influences on foreign policy decisions
Two models for understanding the role of the media
Pluralist model: No one group or set of interests can dominateMedia and public are independent from political influence and can act as a constraint on governmentAssumes that power is dispersed throughout society
Elite model: Power concentrated within elite groups able to dominate politicsMedia & public opinion subservient to political elites; media only a mouthpiece for governmentIn this view media isn’t really independent and instead works more to mobilize public support for government policies
Public opinion and foreign policy
In a democracy, we expect that the pluralist model should be true
A government is supposed to be responsive to public opinion
Challenge is that we see differing views of the public: attentive, mass, non-attitudes, irrational
Clashing ideas about ability of public opinion to influence foreign policy
Pluralist: public opinion is independent of government and the media (media as objective and public capable of forming an independent opinion)
Elite: public opinion (and media) either irrelevant to policy makers or a pre-established audience for policy makers
Media are central to the public opinion/foreign policy nexus.
Public opinion & media
Media and foreign policy Within democratic states, the media is
supposed to facilitate a full and open debate on important issues within the public sphere. The news media includes: Television news & current affairs programming Newspapers On-line media (a little bit outside traditional model)
Acts as watchdog, agenda-setter, news index, etc.
Conversely tend to think of the elite model applying more to authoritarian governments
Media is controlled by the state Media acts as mouth-piece for the state
Almost more propaganda rather than news
The impact of media? In his memoirs, US President Nixon wrote: “More than ever before, television showed the
terrible human suffering and sacrifice of war… the result was a serious demoralization of the home front, raising the question of whether America would ever again be able to fight an enemy abroad with unity and strength of purpose at home.”
The Vietnam effect
The Vietnam War seen by many as key turning point in US in understanding the impact of media on foreign policy
Start to see new arguments and research on the impact of the media on policy development
Indexing,priming & framing
Indexing - media follow elites both in terms of framing issues and setting the news agenda, don’t set out on their own
Priming - ability of media to prepare and direct public to the issues on which they should judge their leaders
Framing- the way information is presented influences how public perceive specific issues Korean airliner vs Iranian airliner being
shot down
Procedural versus substantive criticism and influence
‘Procedural’ criticism and influence: describes media criticism and influence that relates to debates over the implementation of policy decisions.
‘Substantive’ criticism and influence: describes criticism and influence that relates to the underlying justifications and rationale for particular foreign policies.
Find that mainstream media criticism tends to be more at procedural level rather than challenging the underlying justifications for policy choices
Media, public opinion, and theoretical frames
The relationship among public opinion, media and foreign policy can be integrated with major IR schools of thought:
• Realism
• Liberalism
• Critical approaches
New technology and the ‘war on terror’
Have seen rise in new forms of communication technology: Internet and global media (CNN & Al-Jazeera)
We would expect that this would make states unable to suppress ‘bad news’.
Critical question: whether peoples of the world have become any more, or any less, informed about global affairs.
The ‘War on Terror’
For liberals, the appearance of new issues, such as the ‘war on terror’, challenge their claims for the existence of a more adversarial and independent post-Cold War media
For realist and critical approaches, the ‘war on terror’ and its impact upon media autonomy and public perception of global affairs, confirms subservience of both to broader political and economic forces
Conclusion Media has important influence on public
opinion and FP Media can be seen as democratic force
holding state accountable (pluralist) or mouth piece for the state, mobilizing the public to its cause (elite)
New technology has potential to make it harder to states to control message, but verdict still out