Framed? Judicialization and the Risk of Negative Episodic Media Coverage

Author:

Barnes Jeb,Hevron Parker

Abstract

Activists on the left and right have increasingly turned to the courts to make policy, raising questions about the potential risks of judicialization. One possibility is that litigation is more prone to negative episodic media coverage than alternative modes of policymaking. Using across- and within-policy area comparisons of stories about the Federal Black Lung Program, collective asbestos litigation strategies, and individual asbestos tort suits, we find that coverage becomes steadily more episodic and critical as it focuses on policy regimes that feature increasing amounts of adversarial legalism. Moreover, even the broadest coverage of asbestos litigation fails to explain why victims of asbestos turned to the courts, how powerful interests constrained their policy options, or how judges urged Congress to act. This limited and relatively critical anecdotal reporting implies that litigation may engender less favorable media coverage than its alternatives and that activists should weigh this risk when deciding to litigate.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Law,General Social Sciences

Reference130 articles.

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1. Tort tales and total justice: Exploring attitudes toward everyday tort claims for workplace injuries;Law & Society Review;2023-12

2. Turning on Those Who Turn to the Courts: Experimental Evidence of Backlash Against Personal Injury Litigants;Journal of Law and Courts;2023-04-25

3. Adversarial Legalism;Encyclopedia of Public Policy;2023

4. Adversarial Legalism;Encyclopedia of Public Policy;2023

5. Untangling the Concept of Adversarial Legalism;Annual Review of Law and Social Science;2020-10-13

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