The Effect of Media Coverage on Mass Shootings

Michael Jetter, Jay K. Walker
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Can media coverage of shooters encourage future mass shootings? We explore the link between the day-to-day prime time television news coverage of shootings on ABC World News Tonight and subsequent mass shootings in the US from January 1, 2013 to June 23, 2016. To circumvent latent endogeneity concerns, we employ an instrumental variable strategy: worldwide disaster deaths provide an exogenous variation that systematically crowds out shooting-related coverage. Our findings consistently suggest a positive and statistically significant effect of coverage on the number of subsequent shootings, lasting for 4-10 days. At its mean, news coverage is suggested to cause approximately three mass shootings in the following week, which would explain 55 percent of all mass shootings in our sample. Results are qualitatively consistent when using (i) additional keywords to capture shooting-related news coverage, (ii) alternative definitions of mass shootings, (iii) the number of injured or killed people as the dependent variable, and (iv) an alternative, longer data source for mass shootings from 2006-2016.
媒体报道对大规模枪击事件的影响
媒体对枪手的报道会鼓励未来的大规模枪击事件吗?我们探讨了2013年1月1日至2016年6月23日,ABC《今夜世界新闻》每天黄金时段对枪击事件的电视新闻报道与随后发生在美国的大规模枪击事件之间的联系。为了规避潜在的内生性问题,我们采用了一种工具变量策略:世界范围内的灾难死亡提供了一种外生变量,系统地排挤了与枪击有关的报道。我们的研究结果一致表明,报道对随后的枪击事件数量有积极的、统计上显著的影响,持续4-10天。平均而言,新闻报道被认为在接下来的一周内造成了大约三起大规模枪击事件,这可以解释我们样本中55%的大规模枪击事件。当使用(i)其他关键词捕获枪击相关新闻报道,(ii)大规模枪击的替代定义,(iii)受伤或死亡人数作为因变量,以及(iv) 2006-2016年大规模枪击事件的替代更长数据源时,结果在质量上是一致的。
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