The Supreme Court, the Media, and Public Opinion Comparing Experimental and Observational Methods

Can Supreme Court rulings change Americans’ policy views? Prior experimental and observational studies come to conflicting conclusions because of methodological limitations. We argue that existing studies overlook the media’s critical role in communicating Court decisions and theorize that major dec...

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Published in:The Journal of legal studies Vol. 45; no. 2; pp. 223 - 254
Main Authors: Linos, Katerina, Twist, Kimberly
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Chicago Law School 01-06-2016
The University of Chicago Press
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Summary:Can Supreme Court rulings change Americans’ policy views? Prior experimental and observational studies come to conflicting conclusions because of methodological limitations. We argue that existing studies overlook the media’s critical role in communicating Court decisions and theorize that major decisions change Americans’ opinions most when the media offer one-sided coverage supportive of the Court majority. We fielded nationally representative surveys shortly before and after two major Supreme Court decisions on health care and immigration and connected our public opinion data with six major television networks’ coverage of each decision. We find that Court decisions can influence national opinion and increase support for policies the Court upholds as constitutional. These effects were largest among people who received one-sided information. To address selection concerns, we combined this observational study with an experiment and find that people who first heard about the Court decisions through the media and through the experiment responded in similar ways.
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ISSN:0047-2530
1537-5366
DOI:10.1086/687365