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The social mediated construction of 'bad' laws| An ethnographic content analysis of Arizona SB 1062

<p> My thesis examines the socially mediated construction of reality, and how through this, laws can come to be perceived as &lsquo;bad&rsquo;. I expand upon Berger and Luckmanns (1966) Social Construction of Reality theory to illustrate this process. A qualitative research approach called ethnographic content analysis or &lsquo;ECA&rsquo; was used to gather data from Twitter and Facebook (Altheide, 1996). With ECA I examine cultural artifacts like postings and publications on the Internet and in these social media networks. I explore how users of Twitter and Facebook construct a reality in which a law becomes bad through habitual use of social media. I illustrate the social mediated perception of &lsquo;bad&rsquo; laws using a case study of a proposed Arizona bill called <i>The Religious Freedom Restoration Act</i>, or &lsquo;Senate Bill 1062&rsquo; (AZ SB 1062). AZ SB 1062 would have protected a businesses right to refuse service to customers and allowed the use of a &lsquo;sincerely held religious belief&rsquo; as a defense in court for discriminating. An analysis of social media content about this &lsquo;bad&rsquo; law contributes to the scholarly literature by providing a broader look at power and influence in social media, how social media enables stereotypes, and the recycling of images and headlines. Social media reinforces the construction that a law is &lsquo;bad&rsquo; based upon carefully constructed repeated headlines that serve to typify a user&rsquo;s knowledge, in the form of an attention grabbing 140-character tweet.</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:1594024
Date10 September 2015
CreatorsRobb, Allison
PublisherNorthern Arizona University
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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