Influence Dealers: A Path Analysis Model of Agenda Building during Richard Nixon's War on Drugs
In: Journalism & mass communication quarterly: JMCQ, Band 73, Heft 1, S. 181-194
ISSN: 2161-430X
This agenda-building study employed a path analysis model to examine the three-way relationship among the public, the media, and the president on the issue of drug abuse during the Nixon administration. The path model also measured the extent to which these actors were influenced by real-world conditions about the number of drug-related arrests in the United States. Past studies have suggested a cyclical relationship should exist among the president, the press, and the public. This study, however, found a linear relationship with issues moving first, from real world to the media and the public, then from the media to the public, and finally from the public to the president.