Public Trust and Regulatory Governance as represented through the Media

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Citation for Previous Publication

Fernando K, Bubela T, Caulfield T (2006) Public Trust and Regulatory Governance as represented through the Media. 15 Health Law Review 15: 12.

Link to Related Item

Abstract

Description

Media coverage of politics often comments on the decline of the public’s trust in government institutions. There is a notion that public trust of government is steadily decreasing. Many factors contribute to this reduced trust, including: unhappiness with government performance, negativity of election campaigns, distrust of traditional political parties, scandalous behavior of government officials (unethical, incompetent or corrupt conduct) and the changing role of the media. The media is said to be “more interpretive in its reporting and critical of politicians and government” and thus, politicians and government are subject to criticism on a daily basis. The use of “the eight-second spot, the quotable quote, the sound bite and live television in the House of Commons” has assisted in turning politics into a public spectacle. The framing of political coverage in these negative tones stimulates public cynicism which leads to distrust in government.

Item Type

http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843

Alternative

License

Other License Text / Link

© 2006 Health Law Institute, University of Alberta. This version of this article is open access and can be downloaded and shared. The original authors and source must be cited.

Subject/Keywords

Language

en

Location

Time Period

Source