Mediated Policy Effects of Foreign Governments on Iraqi Independent Media During Elections

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Authors

Al-Azdee, Mohammed

Issue Date

2018-03-23

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Other

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en_US

Keywords

Iran , Iraq , Iraqi independent media , Mediated policy , Saudi Arabia , United States of America , Election

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Abstract

I use the term, mediated policy, to refer to messages about Iraq sent by international news media outlets of foreign governments during the Iraqi parliamentary elections of 2010, and I hypothesize that US Mediated Policy, Iranian Mediated Policy, and Saudi Mediated Policy are three latent constructs interacting in a structural model where they influence a fourth latent variable, Iraqi Independent Media. To feed the model with data, I run a content analysis of relevant international and domestic media coverage. I measure saliences (i.e., quantities) of two news media frames, Former Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Former Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi. The analysis shows that in 2010: (1) English represented a barrier to Iraqi independent media. (2) US foreign policy simultaneously dealt with two opposing regional policies, Iranian and Saudi. (3) There were significant policy messages about Iraq carried by international news media of foreign governments, which evidently influenced Iraqi independent media.

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Faculty Research Day 2018: Faculty Competitive Poster Winner

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