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Article
Impacts of Information Subsidies and Community Structure on Local Press Coverage of Environmental Contamination
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
  • Robert Griffin, Marquette University
  • Sharon Dunwoody, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Document Type
Article
Language
eng
Format of Original
14 p.
Publication Date
6-1-1995
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Original Item ID
doi: 10.1177/107769909507200202
Disciplines
Abstract

An analysis of 373 daily newspapers in the Midwest found that community structure and an information subsidy from an environmental group affected press coverage of a story about pollution from industrial toxins. A press kit the group sent to some newspapers appears to have influenced the papers to run a story on industrial toxic releases, but it primarily prompted editors to delegate local staff to cover the story. Results indicate that the press' function to report or raise issues concerning industrial toxic releases and related health risks is tempered by community structure and particularly by community reliance on manufacturing.

Comments

Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Vol. 72, No. 2 (June 1995): 271-284. DOI.

Citation Information
Robert Griffin and Sharon Dunwoody. "Impacts of Information Subsidies and Community Structure on Local Press Coverage of Environmental Contamination" Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly (1995) ISSN: 1077-6990
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/robert_griffin/36/