Why do some social movements in abortion debates get more attention from the news media than others? Do movements that support the status quo receive more attention than those opposing the status quo? Through quantitative content analysis of eight major newspapers in South Korea, Ireland, and Canada and fieldwork in South Korea and Ireland, I theorize that anti-status quo groups – whether they are for or against abortion rights – may reopen debate conditions in their countries by strategically using international human rights norms and frames and gaining standing in the news media in environments that tend to be hostile to their views
This edited collection examines various aspects of the explosive abortion issue in the United States...
This edited collection examines various aspects of the explosive abortion issue in the United States...
The issue of legal regulation of abortion is one of the main challenges facing modern law. The bioet...
Why do some social movements in abortion debates get more attention from the news media than others?...
Why do some social movements in abortion debates get more attention from the news media than others?...
This study examines how ideologically opposed social movement organizations, the National Organizati...
The aim of this study is to analyze whether any media bias and framing can be observed in the U.S. n...
Despite increased scholarly interest in how activists use visuals in claim-making and mobilization, ...
We explore how opportunity environments, conceptualized to include political-legal and cultural comp...
A report submitted by Marilyn A. Mote-Yale to the Research and Creative Productions Committee in 199...
The abortion issue is one of the most polarizing topics within the public and media sphere. How the ...
Social movements typically consist of several diverse organizations, with each using subtly differen...
Since the introduction of a foetal right to life into the Irish Constitution in 1983, abortion has p...
This approach conceptualizes the hostile media effect (HME) as an intergroup phenomenon. Two empiric...
Abortion was apparently widely practiced in the ancient world, with mention of the procedure in some...
This edited collection examines various aspects of the explosive abortion issue in the United States...
This edited collection examines various aspects of the explosive abortion issue in the United States...
The issue of legal regulation of abortion is one of the main challenges facing modern law. The bioet...
Why do some social movements in abortion debates get more attention from the news media than others?...
Why do some social movements in abortion debates get more attention from the news media than others?...
This study examines how ideologically opposed social movement organizations, the National Organizati...
The aim of this study is to analyze whether any media bias and framing can be observed in the U.S. n...
Despite increased scholarly interest in how activists use visuals in claim-making and mobilization, ...
We explore how opportunity environments, conceptualized to include political-legal and cultural comp...
A report submitted by Marilyn A. Mote-Yale to the Research and Creative Productions Committee in 199...
The abortion issue is one of the most polarizing topics within the public and media sphere. How the ...
Social movements typically consist of several diverse organizations, with each using subtly differen...
Since the introduction of a foetal right to life into the Irish Constitution in 1983, abortion has p...
This approach conceptualizes the hostile media effect (HME) as an intergroup phenomenon. Two empiric...
Abortion was apparently widely practiced in the ancient world, with mention of the procedure in some...
This edited collection examines various aspects of the explosive abortion issue in the United States...
This edited collection examines various aspects of the explosive abortion issue in the United States...
The issue of legal regulation of abortion is one of the main challenges facing modern law. The bioet...