Justices and Journalists examines whether justices are becoming
more publicity-conscious and why that might be happening. The book
discusses the motives of justices going public and details their
recent increased number of television and print interviews and
amount of press coverage of their speeches. The book describes the
interactions justices have (and have had) with the journalists who
cover them. These interactions typically are not discussed publicly
by justices or journalists. The book explains why justices care
about press and public relations, how they employ external
strategies to affect press portrayals of themselves and their
institution, and how and why journalists participate in that
interaction. Drawing on the papers of Supreme Court justices in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the book examines these
interactions over the history of the Court. It also includes a
content analysis of print and broadcast media coverage of Supreme
Court justices covering a 40-year period from 1968 to 2007.
General
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