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Understanding the role of media in the formation of public sentiment towards the police

Social Work

Understanding the role of media in the formation of public sentiment towards the police

R. Succar, S. Ramallo, et al.

This compelling study by authors from New York University uncovers how media reports on police brutality shape public perception of law enforcement in the United States. Through an analysis of social media and news coverage, it indicates a meaningful connection between public sentiment and media portrayals of police misconduct, offering insights into the complexities of public trust in police amid rising crime reports.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Public sentiment towards the police is a matter of great interest in the United States, as reports on police misconduct are increasingly being published in mass and social media. Here, we test how the public's perception of the police can be majorly shaped by media reports of police brutality and local crime. We collect data on media coverage of police brutality and local crime, together with Twitter posts from 2010–2020 about the police in 18 metropolitan areas in the country. Using a range of model-free approaches building on transfer entropy analysis, we discover an association between public sentiment towards the police and media coverage of police brutality. We cautiously interpret this relationship as causal. Through this lens, the public's sentiment towards the police appears to be driven by media-projected images of police misconduct, with no statistically significant evidence for a comparable effect driven by media reports on crimes.
Publisher
Communications Psychology
Published On
Feb 07, 2024
Authors
Rayan Succar, Salvador Ramallo, Rishita Das, Roni Barak Ventura, Maurizio Porfiri
Tags
public sentiment
police brutality
media coverage
social media
crime reports
transfer entropy analysis
police misconduct
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