How does media attention shape bureaucratic behavior? We answer this question using novel data from the Mexican federal government. We first develop a new indicator for periods of anomalously heightened media attention, based on 150,000 news articles pertaining to 22 Mexican government ministries and agencies, and qualitatively categorize their themes. We then evaluate government responsiveness using administrative data on roughly 500,000 requests for government information over a 10-year period, with their associated responses. A panel fixed-effects approach demonstrates effects of media attention on the volume of outgoing weekly responses, while a second approach finds effects on the “queue” of information requests already filed when anom...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
Bureaucrats must balance neutral competence with responsiveness to external demands. As external dem...
We construct measures of the extent to which the four main newspapers in Argentina report government...
How does media attention shape bureaucratic behavior? We answer this question using novel data from ...
How does media attention shape bureaucratic behavior? We answer this question using novel data from ...
Agenda-setting scholars have claimed that the typical punctuated pattern of governmental attention i...
When citizens ask questions, how does their government answer? Requests for government information c...
When citizens ask questions, how does their government answer? Requests for government information c...
Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be awar...
Restrictions to media freedom, in the form of repressive defamation legislation, are thought to affe...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
In this paper, we examine and evaluate competing explanations for congressional attention to the fed...
What determines the bureaucratic agenda? This paper combines insights from models of bureaucratic be...
I study how media coverage of corruption news affects citizens' perception on political institutions...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
Bureaucrats must balance neutral competence with responsiveness to external demands. As external dem...
We construct measures of the extent to which the four main newspapers in Argentina report government...
How does media attention shape bureaucratic behavior? We answer this question using novel data from ...
How does media attention shape bureaucratic behavior? We answer this question using novel data from ...
Agenda-setting scholars have claimed that the typical punctuated pattern of governmental attention i...
When citizens ask questions, how does their government answer? Requests for government information c...
When citizens ask questions, how does their government answer? Requests for government information c...
Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be awar...
Restrictions to media freedom, in the form of repressive defamation legislation, are thought to affe...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
In this paper, we examine and evaluate competing explanations for congressional attention to the fed...
What determines the bureaucratic agenda? This paper combines insights from models of bureaucratic be...
I study how media coverage of corruption news affects citizens' perception on political institutions...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
Bureaucrats must balance neutral competence with responsiveness to external demands. As external dem...
We construct measures of the extent to which the four main newspapers in Argentina report government...