Whose Death Matters? A Quantitative Analysis of Media Attention to Deaths of Black Americans in Police Confrontations, 2013–2016

Authors

  • Ethan Zuckerman MIT Center for Civic Media MIT Media Lab MIT CMS/W
  • J. Nathan Matias Cornell University
  • Rahul Bhargava MIT Media Lab MIT Center for Civic Media
  • Fernando Bermejo Media Cloud, MIT Media Lab and Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard
  • Allan Ko MIT CMS/W

Keywords:

activism, agenda setting, race, policing, news media, journalism, Media Cloud, quantitative methods, social media

Abstract

Media coverage of deaths of unarmed people of color at the hands of police sharply increased after the high-profile death of Michael Brown. We analyze a novel set of media data to understand reasons for this rise and to postulate a shift in reporting that treats these deaths as part of a larger pattern, crystallized around the “key event” of Michael Brown’s death rather than as unconnected incidents. We see a “news wave” that resulted in increased coverage and sharing of stories about deaths of people of color at the hands of police that aligned with activist efforts such as the Black Lives Matter movement. Our quantitative methods suggest a mechanism for tracking effectiveness of activist efforts to change the framing of important social phenomena in the news.

Author Biographies

Ethan Zuckerman, MIT Center for Civic Media MIT Media Lab MIT CMS/W

Director, Center for Civic Media, MITAssociate Professor of the Practice, MIT Media LabAssociate Professor of the Practice, Comparative Media Studies and Writing, MIT413-441-3380

Rahul Bhargava, MIT Media Lab MIT Center for Civic Media

Research scientist, Center for Civic Media, MIT Media Lab

Fernando Bermejo, Media Cloud, MIT Media Lab and Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard

Research director, Media Cloud, MIT Media Lab and Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Associate Professor, International University, Madrid

Allan Ko, MIT CMS/W

Undergraduate researcher in CMS/W

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Published

2019-09-22

Issue

Section

Articles