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2009 Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Explaining Media and Congressional Attention to Global Climate Change, 1969-2005: An Empirical Test of Agenda Setting Theory Xinsheng Liu, Eric Lindquist, & Arnold Vedlitz Forthcoming in Political Research Quarterly No part of this paper may be copied, downloaded, stored, further transmitted, transferred, distributed, altered, or otherwise used in any form or by any means, except: (1) one stored copy for personal, non-commercial use, or (2) prior written consent. No alteration of the paper or removal of copyright notice is permitted. Explaining Media and Congressional Attention to Global Climate Change, 1969-2005 An Empirical Test of Agenda Setting Theory Xinsheng Liu Corresponding Author Associate Research Scientist, Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy [email protected] Eric Lindquist Associate Research Scientist Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Arnold Vedlitz Bob Bullock Chair in Government and Public Policy, Bush School of Government and Public Service Director, Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Services Texas A&M University 4350 TAMU College Station, TX 77843-4350 979.862.8855 Authors’ Note: The data utilized in this study is based upon research supported under Award No. NA04OAR4600172 from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), U.S. Department of Commerce. The statements, findings, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or the Department of Commerce. An earlier version of this paper th was presented at the 77 Annual Conference of the Southern Political Science Association, January 5-7, 2006, Atlanta. We thank our graduate research assistant Charles Lindsey for providing statistical assistance to this project. We also thank four anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful comments and excellent suggestions. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University Explaining Media and Congressional Attention to Global Climate Change, 1969-2005 An Empirical Test of Agenda Setting Theory Abstract Agenda theories suggest that problem indicator, focusing event, and information feedback enhance issue attention. However, few studies have systematically tested this. This study, using time series data and vector autoregression (VAR), examines how climate problem indicator, high-profile international event, and climate science feedback influence media and congressional attention to global warming and climate change. Our findings confirm that these attention-grabbing factors indeed generally promote issue salience, but these factors may work differently across agenda venues. Attention inertia, inter-agenda interaction, and partisan advantage on agenda setting are also included and analyzed in the VAR modeling. Implications of the study and recommendations for future research are discussed in conclusion. Keywords: news media; congress; issue attention; agenda setting; global warming; climate change 1. Introduction The question of why and how some issues are placed on the agenda has long been of interest to political scientists and other social science scholars. At any given time, policy makers are confronted with many complex public issues. For a public issue to be seriously considered and handled in the policymaking process, a necessary condition is that the issue must capture the attention of policy elites (Cohen 1963; Cobb and Elder 1983; Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994; Rochefort and Cobb 1994; Kingdon 1995; Jones and Baumgartner 2005). One important question for agenda setting scholars is what factors may contribute to higher levels of attention paid to a public issue. In Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies (1995, 90-103), Kingdon argues that 'problem indicators,' 'focusing events,' and 'feedback' can facilitate bringing a public issue to decision makers' attention and help that issue achieve higher status on the agenda. In a series of 1 important works on agenda setting, Jones and Baumgartner argue, like Kingdon, that relevant information surrounding an issue (including problem indicators and information feedback) is important to decision makers' attention but, so too, is the significant event that provides sudden information shock to the policy system (Jones and Baumgartner 2005; Jones 1994, 2001; Baumgartner and Jones 1993). Kingdon and Jones and Baumgartner may differ in the terms they use to describe what factors may promote issue attention, but they all agree that the dynamics of incoming information sources and flows, reflected in changing problem indicators, occurrence of focusing events, and information feedback are essential for understanding how issues move from obscurity to visibility on policy agendas. In this study, we draw upon the common theoretical elements in agenda theories and apply them to the issue of global climate change. We are particularly interested in examining whether and how problem indicators, focusing events, and scientific feedback induced the US news media and Congress to be attentive to global climate change during the period from 1969 through 2005. First, we briefly review existing research on what factors contribute to capturing the attention of policy elites. Second, we develop our hypotheses and describe how we measure the dependent and independent variables as well as how we collect our data. Third, we employ vector autoregressive (VAR) method for hypothesis-testing and present the results of analysis. Finally, we summarize our main findings, discuss some implications of our study, and make a few recommendations for future research. These empirical tests of attention driving forces of agenda theory are among the first to systematically examine and test the key underlying relational elements of the theory. 2. Attention-Grabbing Factors in Agenda Setting Many scholars have examined various factors that contribute to a higher level of attention to a particular issue. Earlier studies find that issue attention levels are associated with expansion of political conflicts (Schattschneider 1960), issue-attention cycles (Downs 1972), specific issue characteristics such Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 1 as social significance and temporal relevance (Cobb and Elder 1983), policy elites' interests and ideologies (Vertzberger 1990), and various issue framing effects (Fiske and Taylor 1984; Hilgartner and Bosk 1988; Iyengar and Kinder 1987; Iyengar 1990). In Kingdon's Multiple Streams Theory (1995) and Jones and Baumgartner's Punctuated Equilibrium Theory (2005; see also Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994, 2001), issue attention dynamics is systematically addressed from an agenda system perspective. Both theories identify several major system factors that can bring a public problem to the attention of decision makers. In Kingdon's theory, attention attractors in agenda setting include changing problem indicators, focusing events, and information feedback. In Jones and Baumgartner's theory, issue attention is enhanced (sometimes suddenly enhanced) by the intrusion of new (or previously overlooked) information into the policy agenda setting process, and the intrusion of new information is usually associated with changing social conditions and problem indicators, significant events, and information feedback that is looped back into the policy system. 2.1. Problem Indicators For both Kingdon and Jones and Baumgartner, one factor that may increase attention to a problem is the changing factual indicators surrounding the problem. Problem indicators may come in various shapes, sizes, formats, and from multiple sources. Some indicators may come from direct experience (paying more at the gas station indicates certain conditions within the energy sector), but most indicators (such as unemployment rates, economic growth rates, crime rates, mortality rates, high school drop-out rates, or highway death rates) are presented to the public and policy elites in an abstract, index-type, quantitative format from second-hand data sources. For the issue of global warming and climate change, there are many kinds of factual and baseline information indicators, ranging from greenhouse gas emissions to precipitation patterns, from arctic ice sheet melting to sea level rise, from complicated long-term climate change projections to short-term extreme weather conditions, and from climate-related economic losses, and infectious diseases to landuse practices. Several studies have explored how short-term, weather-related, extreme conditions (such as unusually hot temperatures and droughts), amplified by interested constituencies, may contribute to increase attention to the climate change issue (Ungar 1992; Shanahan and Good 2000), but no previous study has examined the relationship between long-term, system-level, climate change indicators and national media and congressional attention. In this study, we use two systematic time series of climate change indicators—the atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration levels and the US Climate Extremes Index (CEI)—to examine the effect of problem indicators on US policy elites' attention to climate change. We shall return to these two indictors in the variable measurement section. 2.2. Focusing Events and Information Shocks According to agenda theorists, the availability of problem indicators and their amplification by motivated stakeholders may not be enough to cause a condition to rise on the policy agenda as a problem. Something must happen to push that concern above the noise threshold of other issues. Such factors are referred to as focusing or triggering events (Kingdon 1995; Birkland 1997, 1998; see also Cobb and Elder 1983; Dearing and Rogers 1996), or in Jones and Baumgartner's model as information shocks. Much of the existing work on focusing events/information shocks has concentrated on natural or man-made crises and disasters. Birkland, in particular, has advanced our understanding of the "politics of disasters," or the reaction to a focusing event by various stakeholders including the media, decision makers, and interest groups (Birkland 1996, 1997, 1998, 2004; see also Birkland and Nath 2000; Lawrence and Birkland 2004). For agenda scholars, focusing events/information shocks, with the cumulative effect of raising awareness of the problem, can reinforce existing indicators and become a principal lever for getting an issue moved to the front of the line (Kingdon 1995; Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994; Birkland 1997, 1998). Prominent examples of focusing events include the Three Mile Island incident (Rankin, Nealey and Melber 1984; Baumgartner and Jones 1993), the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks (Birkland, 2004), and Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 (Liu, Vedlitz and Alston 2008). Various effects of focusing events or information shocks on issue attention, definition, and access to policy agendas have been examined by scholars. These studies find that focusing events can bring visibility to hidden issues (Kingdon 1995; Baumgartner and Jones 1993), introduce new dimensions and new policy alternatives into policy debates (Hilgartner and Bosk 1988; Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994; Birkland 2004), mobilize interest groups (Birkland 1998), expand issue conflict (Schattschneider 1960), and re-organize Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 2 issue networks and allies (Baumgartner and Jones 1993). Whether such events reinforce existing indicators or serve as new catalysts to agenda mobilization, the important role of focusing events and resulting information shocks in sparking and enhancing issue attention is generally shared by agenda scholars. Following this thinking, this study will examine how focusing events in the climate change domain generate issue attention, with a particular focus on how certain high-profile international events may influence the status of the climate change issue on US congressional and news media agendas. 2.3. Feedback The third factor that may grab policy elites' attention and promote the prominence of an issue is what Kingdon calls "feedback" and Jones and Baumgartner call "information feedback." Both theories, in line with the systems analysis literature (Easton 1965; Richardson 1991), maintain that in a democratic polity, policy elites constantly receive feedback about the operation of existing governmental programs and hear complaints about public issues being overlooked or neglected. Feedback sometimes comes internally from governmental officials' routine activities and daily experience in administering or monitoring existing programs. More often, feedback comes to governmental officials from external, non-governmental, venues. Public opinion polls, citizen complaints, interest group pressures, and opinion leaders' criticisms all provide feedback that can amplify the attention given to an issue. Among various non-governmental venues, the scientific community sometimes plays a key role in providing information feedback to policy systems, particularly for those issues involving scientific and technological uncertainty and complexity (May 1990; Birkland 2001). Through scientific research activities and products (surveys, reports, journal articles, scholarly books), the science community provides data on natural and social conditions, assesses policy programs, and identifies problems. In this study, we will attempt to measure the flow of information feedback from the climate science community and empirically examine the influence of the information provided by this community on the issue of climate change on US media and congressional agendas. 3. Hypotheses on Media and Congressional Attention Dynamics Climate change as an issue has appeared in the US news media and in the congressional hearings since the late 1960s and early 1970s, but the status of the issue on both media and congressional agendas has fluctuated over the last four decades (see next section for a brief review of the issue status in both agendas). What explains the rise and fall of media and congressional attention to the climate change issue? Following the basic arguments of our agenda theorists, that problem indicators, focusing events, and information feedback are the key factors for an issue to gain attention and agenda status, we propose the following hypotheses: H1a/H1b: News media/congressional attention to climate change is affected by the indictors of the problem. More specifically, the more severe the problem (reflected by climate change indictors), the more attention is paid by the news media/Congress. H2a/H2b: News media/congressional attention to climate change is positively influenced by the occurrence of focusing events in the climate change domain. H3a/H3b: News media/congressional attention to climate change is positively associated with the amount of scientific information feedback regarding climate change. More specifically, the stronger the feedback is, the more attention is paid to the issue by the news media/Congress. In addition to the three attention-grabbing factors discussed by agenda theorists, several other forces may also affect media and congressional attention. First, many scholars have noted that there is a strong tendency toward inertia in policy elites' attention dynamics – that is, attention paid to a social issue at a time is strongly associated with the amount of attention to that issue at previous times (Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994; Wood and Peake 1998; True 1999; Soroka 2002; Liu 2006). Second, previous studies suggest there is often a spillover effect among different policy arenas and institutions (Cobb and Elder 1983; Hilgartner and Bosk 1988; Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Kingdon 1995, 190-194). As Hilgartner and Bosk (1988, 67) state: "Through a complex set of linkages, activities in each arena propagate throughout the others. If a social problem rises in one institution, it is likely to spread into others." Nevertheless, several recent studies demonstrate that inter-agenda interactions could be far more complicated than a simple spillover or convergence, suggesting that sometimes considerable disconnect or divergence could be found across different arenas (Lawrence and Birkland 2004; see also Jones and Baumgartner 2005). Third, some studies indicate that majority party in Congress may exert Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 3 significant influence on issue agenda setting. More specifically, Republican party as a whole, with its unfavorable position toward environmentalism and openly hostile stance on global warming, may inhibit climate change issue in the agenda-setting process (Dunlap, Xiao and McCright 2001; McCright and Dunlap 2003; Mooney 2005; see also Jones and Baumgartner 2005, 1-2). Based on these observations, three additional hypotheses – attention inertia, inter-agenda spillover, and partisan advantage – are proposed here: H4a/H4b: News media/congressional attention to climate change at a given time is positively influenced by news media/congressional attention at previous times. H5a/H5b: There is a positive inter-agenda interaction between media and congressional attention to climate change. In other words, media attention and congressional attention positively influence each other. H6a/H6b: There is a negative relationship between Republican's control in Congress and media/congressional attention to climate change. In other words, the stronger the Republican advantage, the more restriction of issue access and thereby lower news/congressional attention to climate change. 4. Dependent Variables and Attention Measurement In this study, we use proxy measures to trace the rise and fall of US media and congressional attention to climate change over the time period from 1969 to 2005. 4.1. Media Attention to Climate Change To measure US media attention to global climate change, we calculated the annual number of climate change articles published in the New York Times. This method of using the annual number of articles to measure the media attention to a particular public issue has been widely used in news media agenda setting studies (see, for examples, Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Soroka 2002; Jones and Baumgartner 2 2005). We used the LexisNexis online searchable newspaper database (which contains a large volume of historical and current news stories from various US newspapers, including all New York Times articles starting from January 1, 1969), and searched relevant articles containing one of the following key terms: "climate change," "global warming" and "greenhouse gas." There were two reasons to use these three key terms for our article search. First, according to previous studies on the history of the climate change issue, these three terms have been frequently and consistently used in media stories, policy debates, and scientific research over the last several decades (Houghton 2004; Dessler and Parson 2006). Second, other empirical studies suggest that using these three key terms (or similar ones) will capture most climate change articles from LexisNexis (McComas and Shannahan 1999; Liu, Vedlitz and Alston 2008). To test this, we used a number of additional keywords also related to global warming and climate change (e.g., "sea level rise," "melting ice sheet," "Kyoto protocol," etc.), and conducted additional rounds of article search in LexisNexis. We found that the additional keywords did not show significant advantage 3 over the three keyword approach. 4 With the validity check of the three keywords, we followed specific search procedures in LexisNexis. Our LexisNexis search yielded a total of 4,197 articles published in the New York Times from 1969 through 2005. We took additional steps to ensure that these articles fairly represent the US news media's attention to climate change. First, we verified that the retrieved articles did not contain a lot of "noise," i.e., articles that mentioned global warming or climate change yet were mainly about another topic. We drew a random 10% sample (420 articles) from these 4,197 search results and carefully reviewed each sample article. Among the 420 sample articles we reviewed, 268 were validated as true climate change stories. Time series graphs of the 268 true climate change articles and the 4,197 raw search results yielded almost identical patterns, and the correlation between the annual numbers of sample true stories and the raw search results is extremely high (0.98, p<.001). Second, we compared the coverage patterns of the New York Times with other major national newspapers. Using the same key terms, we conducted search in LexisNexis and collected the annual number of climate change articles from the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune. Almost identical patterns and high correlations were found among these three newspapers. Based on these examinations, we are fairly confident that the annual number of the New York Times articles is a good proxy measure of the US media attention to climate change. Figure 1 Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 4 displays our search results, showing the annual number of climate change articles published in the New York Times from 1969 through 2005. The graph in Figure 1 shows an overall trend in the news media: despite some short-term declines in coverage, climate change has steadily gained more and more attention in the news media over the last four decades. Prior to the 1980s, climate change was generally a low-salience issue, with very little coverage in the media (2.9 articles per year in the 1970s). Starting from the early 1980s, climate change began to gain increasing visibility in the media, and the average annual number of articles increased to 56.4 articles per year in the 1980s. There were some fluctuations in the 1990s, but the overall media attention continued to grow with an average of 157.7 articles per year. The first six years of the 2000s continued this trend and media attention reached a new high, with an average 337.3 articles per year from 2000 through 2005. Figure 1: Annual Number of Climate Change Articles, New York Times, 1969-2005 450 400 350 300 Number of 250 New York Times Articles 200 150 100 50 0 Year 4.2. Congressional Attention to Climate Change To measure congressional attention, we collected the annual number of congressional hearings on climate change and global warming. Similar methods to measure the attention paid by Congress as a whole to an issue were used in several previous policy agenda studies (Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones and Baumgartner 2005; see also MacLeod 2002; Hunt 2002; Sheingate 2006). There are three major online sources available for collecting congressional hearing data: the Policy Agenda Project, the Thomas website (a legislative information website from the Library of Congress), and 5 LexisNexis Congressional Publications. All three datasets are searchable by key terms. We choose to use the LexisNexis Congressional Publications, because this database includes all hearings from 1969 to the present, while the Policy Agenda Project contains hearing data only up to 1999 and the Thomas database begins with 1989 hearings. Using the same three keywords as in the news media search, the LexisNexis congressional search retrieved a total of 148 congressional hearings from 1969 to 2005. Figure 2 shows the annual number of hearings on climate change and global warming from the LexisNexis congressional search. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 5 As Figure 2 shows, congressional attention to global warming and climate change fluctuated over the last several decades. From the late 1960s to the mid-1980s, congressional hearing activity was minimal. In the late 1980s, congressional attention to climate change rapidly increased—in 1989, twenty one hearings were held in Congress. In the following years, there were short term declines of interest, but the overall congressional attention to climate change was sustained at about eight hearings per year during the period of 1988 through 2005. 5. Independent Variables and Measurement Our literature review suggests that attention to a particular social issue may be affected by the following variables: problem indicators, focusing events, information feedback, attention inertia, interagenda spillover and partisan influence. Now, let us turn our discussion to how we measured these variables. Figure 2: Annual Number of Congressional Hearings on Climate Change, 1969-2005 25 20 15 Number of Congressional Hearings 10 5 0 Year 5.1. Indicators of Global Warming and Climate Change Among various indicators of global warming and climate change, the most fundamental one is perhaps the global carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration data – also known as the "Keeling Curve" named after Charles David Keeling. As a leading authority on atmospheric greenhouse gas accumulation and a climate science pioneer at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, Keeling started measuring and monitoring the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in the late 1950s. Keeling's data indicate an upward curve that shows a steady increase in global atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide—one of the major greenhouse gases causing the earth's atmosphere to heat up and contributing to global warming and climate change. Several studies demonstrates the significance of Keeling's CO2 measurements in raising the alarm about global warming and setting the scene for the debate over climate change problems (Bodansky 2001; Weart 2004; Hansen 2005; Briggs 2007; Nisbet 2007), but whether the news media and Congress systematically respond to this problem indicator over a relatively long time period is an empirical question. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 6 6 To measure the increasing CO2 levels, we calculated the first order difference of Keeling data —Net Keeling Level (NKL), which is simply the net change between the levels of carbon dioxide concentration at the current year t and the previous year t-1. If the net change of Keeling's CO2 concentration level (NKL) represents a general indicator of the climate change problem at the global level, the US Climate Extreme Index (CEI) may constitute a specific indicator of the problem facing the United States. The CEI was developed by the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) as a way to quantify observed abnormal changes in the climate system within the contiguous Unites States for each calendar year since 1910. It aims to summarize and present "a complex set of multivariate and multidimensional climate changes in the United States so that the results could be easily understood and used in policy decisions made by nonspecialists in the field" (NCDC 2006). The CEI is calculated based on a set of recorded climate information, including maximum and minimum temperatures, extreme precipitation events, drought severity, and landfalling tropical storms and hurricane wind velocity. The value of the CEI ranges from 0 to 100, with 0 indicating no climate extremes were recorded for that year and 100 meaning the entire contiguous United States experienced extreme climate conditions for all the indicators 7 throughout the year. In this study, we use both NKL and CEI as objective indicators of the climate change problem facing the United States from 1969 to 2005. Figure 3 displays the two data series. Note that the two series have different scales in Figure 3 – NKL is scaled to the left y-axis whereas the CEI is scaled to the right y-axis. Both series show an overall upward trend, suggesting the conditions associated with global warming and climate change have been getting worse over the last several decades. Figure 3: Net Change of CO2 Level (NKL) and Climate Extreme Index (CEI), 1969-2005 NKL: Net Keeling Level of CO2 CEI: Climate Extreme Index (right axis) 4.5 45 4 40 3.5 35 3 30 2.5 25 2 20 1.5 15 1 10 0.5 5 0 0 Year Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 7 5.2. International Focusing Events Much of the existing work on focusing events suggests that crises or natural disasters spark intense issue attention. However, in the case of climate change, it is difficult, if not impossible, to directly link any natural disaster with global climate change in a causal manner. In the climate science community, scholars continue to debate whether there is linkage between severe natural events and global climate 8 change. Among the general public, a national survey released by the Pew Research Center (2005) indicates that only one in four Americans assumed any linkage between the severity of Hurricane Katrina and global climate change, while two-thirds believed it was just the kind of severe weather event that happens from time to time. Focusing events include major crises and natural disasters, but "focusing events are not always so straightforward" (Kingdon 1995, 96). More often, focusing events take other forms: scandals, trials, protests and demonstrations, international settlements, agreements, or treaties, creation of new institutions or reconfiguration of existing organizations, scientific discoveries, and even prominent books (e.g., Rachel Carson's Silent Spring) (Kingdon 1995; Hilgartner and Bosk 1988). In line with this thinking, we argue that certain high profile, symbolic, landmark, international events, such as the creation of a large scale international organization or institution on global warming and climate change, may constitute a focusing event in the climate change domain. In this regard, we expand the traditional definition of focusing event concept to include other types of events. There have been many climate change events over the last several decades. In this study, we are particularly interested in the major events occurring at the international/multinational level. We define an international focusing event in the climate change field as an historical and highly publicized event that involves many countries and/or international institutions. More specifically and operationally, an event must meet at least one of the following four criteria to qualify as an international focusing event (IFE): (a) creation of an unprecedented international agreement, protocol, or treaty on mitigating global warming and climate change; (b) establishment of a new international or intergovernmental institution on climate change; (c) occurrence of a world-wide, high profile, convention or conference on global warming and climate change; or (d) release of a new, landmark type, scientific assessment on climate change by a highly reputable international scientific organization. Based on our definition and operational criteria, we examined a variety of international/multinational events on global warming and climate change. Three official reference documents with relatively comprehensive chronicle records on major climate change events were closely reviewed by our 9 researchers. Eight international events met our operational definition and were identified as historical milestones on global warming and climate change. These events are (1) the Montreal Protocol in 1987; (2) the Toronto Conference on the Changing Atmosphere and the creation of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) under the United Nations Environmental Programme and the United Nations World Meteorological Organization in 1988; (3) the IPCC First Assessment Report on Climate Change and the World Climate Conference in Geneva in 1990; (4) the creation of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in 1992; (5) the IPCC Second Assessment Report on Climate Change and the First Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC (i.e., COP-1, which produced the "Berlin mandate") in 1995; (6) the Second Conference of Parties to the UNFCCC (COP-2) in Geneva in 1996; (7) the Third Conference of Parties to UNFCCC (COP-3) in Kyoto and the Kyoto Protocol in 1997; and (8) the 10 IPCC Third Assessment Report on Climate Change in 2001. All these international focusing events (IFE) were coded as a dummy variable in our dataset. Focusing events may have both contemporaneous and lagged effects on media and congressional agendas. We shall return to this point and address how we incorporate both immediate and lagged effects of focusing events in the VAR modeling section later. 5.3. Scientific Feedback The third independent variable in our study is the information feedback from the climate science community. This community constantly provides feedback to journalists and policy makers through a variety of activities and channels: research projects and funding proposals, scientific discoveries and research findings, academic publications, public speeches, congressional testimonies, participation in government consulting and science advisory committees, memberships in academic societies and associations, presentations at professional conferences and meetings, and popular science articles in newspapers and magazines. Due to the wide-ranging activities and efforts, it is a rather difficult task to measure the feedback from the climate science community. In this study, we choose to utilize a proxy Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 8 measure: scientific publications by climate scientists. Using scientific publications to trace the activity levels of a science community is not new to agenda studies. For instance, Walker (1977), in his study of the US Senate's problem recognition and selection process, used the number of articles in technical journals to measure the professional activities of the science community in the areas of traffic safety and occupational health. For this study, we used the three same key terms —"climate change, " "global warming," and "greenhouse gas"— to search climate change related publications in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI) and the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) databases available at the Web of 11 Science. Both SCI and SSCI databases are searchable by key terms, document types (article, abstract of published item, book review, etc.), languages (English and other languages), author's address (for example, US author), and publication year. We used the three key terms to search in article abstracts, set 12 the search span from 1969 to 2005, and restricted our search to publications in English language only. A total of 33,557 climate change publications were found from SCI and SSCI databases for the period 13 from 1969 to 2005. The annual number of these scientific publications was then computed. To more precisely measure the degree of scientific feedback from climate scientists, we calculated the Net Scientific Publication (NSP) on climate change each year – the difference between the number of scientific articles published in the current year and the number of articles published the previous year. The NSP series is presented in Figure 4. Figure 4: Net Scientific Publications (NSP) on Climate Change, 1969-2005 700 650 600 550 500 450 400 Net Scientific 350 Publications 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Year 5.4. Attention Inertia, Inter-Agenda Connection and Partisan Advantage Previous policy studies have indicated strong attention inertia in many policy issue fields. The attention inertia variable in both news media and congressional attention models is simply the lagged attention variable measured by past values of New York Times articles or congressional hearings on climate change. Specific lag orders will be discussed and determined in the VAR modeling section below. Since we are also interested in detecting whether there is inter-agenda spillover between the news media Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 9 and Congress, the congressional attention variable is then used as an independent variable in the media attention model, and the media attention variable is used as an independent variable in the congressional attention model. Republican advantage (REP) is measured by that party's control in Congress. REP is coded as 1 for the years when the GOP was the majority party of both the House and Senate, 0 when it controlled only one chamber, and -1 when both chambers were under a Democratic majority. This measure will allow exploration of possible Republican advantage on restricting discussion of the climate change issue. 6. VAR Modeling and Result The time span of our analysis is from 1969 to 2005. It should be reiterated that the two dependent variables we attempt to explain are measures of the media's attention and congressional attention to the climate change issue, respectively, not specific proposals, actions, or policies to mitigate climate change. Given the longitudinal nature of our data, we employ time-series regression methods to test the hypotheses and examine the relationships between the dependent and independent variables. We estimate two general equations to explain the media and congressional attention: H I J K L M N MAt = α 1 + ∑ β 1( h ) MAt − h + ∑ β 2(i ) CAt −i + ∑ β 3( j ) REPt − j + ∑ β 4( k ) NKLt − k + ∑ β 5(l ) CEI t −l + ∑ β 6( m ) IFE t − m + ∑ β 7 ( n ) NSPt − n + ε 1t h =1 i =1 H I J j =1 K k =1 L l =1 M m =1 N n =1 h =1 i =1 j =1 k =1 l =1 m =1 n =1 CAt = α 2 + ∑ β 8( h ) MAt − h +∑ β 9(i ) CAt −i + ∑ β 10( j ) REPt − j + ∑ β 11( k ) NKLt − k + ∑ β 12(l ) CEI t −l + ∑ β 13( m ) IFE t − m + ∑ β 14( n ) NSPt − n + ε 2t These two equations treat the media attention (MA) and congressional attention (CA) as a dynamic system. With the two-equation system, the current values for each of the two endogenous variables (i.e., MA and CA) are predicted by the following variables: (1) past values of the endogenous variable itself; (2) past values of the other endogenous variable; and (3) exogenous variables with or without lags, including the Republican advantage (REP) and the attention-attracting factors: net change of Keeling's CO2 concentration level (NKL), US Climate Extremes Index (CEI), international focusing event (IFE), and net 14 scientific publication (NSP). Due to the high possibility of autocorrelated variables in the time series equations, we utilize the Vector Autoregression (VAR) method for our model testing. One advantage of VAR modeling is that it provides strong control for autocorrelations in the system. Another advantage of VAR is that it can provide empirical evidence for Granger causality of two possibly interactive variables (i.e., media attention and congressional attention in this study), particularly when there is no prior theory to establish direction of 15 causation between these two variables. The notion of Granger causality is an econometric definition of causality: "Yt is causing Xt if we are better able to predict Xt using all information than if the information apart from Yt had been used" (Granger 1969, 428). In other words, the test of Granger causality asks, "Is there variation in one variable that cannot be explained by past values of that variable, but can be explained by past values of another variable?" (Menard 1991, 57). If the answer is yes, then the second variable Granger-causes the first. In these two equations, h, i, j, k, l, m, and n are the number of lags for each variables. One major task in VAR modeling is to determine the proper number of lags that should be used for these variables. The strategy to determine lag length in vector autoregression is usually based on either theoretical plausibility or lag-order selection statistics (Hill 1998; Soroka 2002). In our VAR testing, we chose one lag for each of the endogenous variables based on both theoretical plausibility and pre-estimation of lag-order selection tests. First, we think that one year is probably the most theoretically plausible lag number for the endogenous variable, because it is quite unlikely, if not totally impossible, that the current value of one of the endogenous attention variables, say congressional attention, would be affected by the past values of the other endogenous variable (i.e., media attention) more than a year previously. Second, we utilized the standard lag selection procedure to identify how many lags to use in the VAR. The pre-estimation of lag16 order selection statistic indicated that the optimal lag for the endogenous variables was one. In the equations, real-world problem indicators (NKL and CEI), international focusing events (IFE), and scientific feedback (NSP) are exogenous attention-grabbing variables. Since real-world data were compiled and released on an annual basis and the current year indictors would not be available until sometime in the following year, we chose one lag for NKL and CEI. We also chose one lag for the Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 10 scientific feedback variable (NSP), because it should take some time for the scientific publications to be transformed into certain scientific feedback, and then for the media and the Congress to react to the scientific feedback. For the international focusing events (IFE) variable, we used both current year t-0 and last year t-1, as these events could have immediate impact and some short-term influence on the media and the Congress. In addition, we expect the news media to react to international events more quickly than Congress, and by including both the current and preceding year's events in the system of equations, we can examine whether and how the international events affect the media and the Congress in terms of different time frames. For the variable Republican control of Congress (REP), we did not use any lag, because partisan advantage on issue agenda setting, if there is any, should have no delay. Based on the discussions above, a reduced form of our VAR model is presented as follows: MAt = α 1 + β 1 MAt −1 + β 2 CAt −1 + β 3 REPt + β 4 NKLt −1 + β 5 CEI t −1 + β 6 IFEt + β 7 IFEt −1 + β 8 NSPt −1 + ε 1t CAt = α 2 + β 9 CAt −1 + β 10 MAt −1 + β 11 REPt + β 12 NKLt −1 + β 13 CEI t −1 + β 14 IFEt + β 15 IFEt −1 + β 16 NSPt −1 + ε 2t We used Stata 10 to run the reduced VAR model. Lagrange-multiplier test indicates no autocorrelation at lag order 1. Jarque-Bera diagnostics show the data are from normal distribution, and VAR satisfies Eigenvalue stability condition. There are no multicollinearity issues among the exogenous variables (all VIFs < 2). Table 1 reports the results of our VAR model of media and congressional attention dynamics. Table 1 provides empirical evidence for our hypothesis tests. First, the results show a strong attention inertia effect. In both the media attention and congressional attention models, current attention is significantly affected by past attention to the issue of climate change. This finding is consistent with other policy agenda studies that demonstrated strong effects of attention inertia in various policy issue domains (Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994; Wood and Peake 1998; Soroka 2002; Liu 2006). Second, there is no evidence to support the inter-agenda spillover hypothesis with these annual data series using one year lag: past year's media attention does not Granger cause current year's congressional attention (p=.11), and neither does past-year congressional attention Granger cause current year's media attention (p=.94) when controlling real-world indicators, international focusing events, scientific feedback, and Republican control of Congress. This finding seems to be in line with some recent empirical studies, in which inter-agenda interactions are found to be strong in certain issue fields, but very weak or non-existent in the domain of environmental issues (see, for example, Soroka 2002). A comparison of the trend lines in Figures 1 and 2 indicates that congressional attention and media attention to climate change generally mirror one another until 1999. So, it is possible that inter-agenda effects may exist for certain time periods. After 1999, media attention generally keeps climbing and maintains a relatively high level, but congressional attention drops to the lowest level since the late 1980s, particularly after 2001, when the Bush administration minimized interest in global warming and climate change. It is also possible that sporadic jumps in congressional activity could spark media attention (or vice versa) on a daily or weekly basis, however, when using the data series spanning several decades and aggregated at an annual level, we simply find no long-term sustainable inter-agenda effects between media attention and congressional attention to climate change. Third, Republican control of Congress appears to have some effect of inhibiting discussion of climate change in both the news media and the Congress – the stronger the GOP's control, the less attention is paid to climate change. However, both models show that the Republican advantage in constraining climate change issue is not statistically significant. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 11 Table 1: The Determinants of Media and Congressional Attention Media Attention c (n=36) Independent Variables a Congressional Attention c (n=36) b Attention Inertia .717*** (.154) .573*** (.119) -.187 (2.386) -.013 (.008) -.221 (15.233) -.549 (.759) 33.131 (20.682) -.768 (1.224) 1.952* (1.031) -.033 (.061) 56.640** (25.814) -20.683 (25.325) -1.534 (1.287) 7.234*** (1.262) .211* (.117) .011** (.006) R 0.857 0.777 F 19.395*** 11.290*** Media (last year) / Congress (last year) Inter-Agenda Influence Congress (last year) / Media (last year) Partisan Advantage Republican Control in Congress Problem Indicators Net Keeling Level (last year) Climate Extreme Index (last year) Focusing Events International Focusing Event (current year) International Focusing Event (last year) Feedback Net Scientific Publication (last year) 2 * p < 0.1; ** p < 0.05; *** p< 0.01. Cell entries are the regression coefficients with small sample degree-of-freedom adjustment. a For the media attention model, inertia is measured by last year media attention, and inter-agenda effect is measured by last year b congressional attention. For the congressional attention model, inertia is measured by last year congressional attention, and inter-agenda c influence is measured by last year media attention. Small-sample t-statistics are computed due to the relatively small sample size for VAR. The small sample t-statistics are in parentheses. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 12 Fourth, the VAR results provide certain empirical evidence that generally supports the agenda theorists' proposition on issue attention dynamics. Among the three attention-attracting factors, climate change problem indictors appear to have only marginal effect on climate change issue attention, as only one of the two system-level indicators – i.e., the net change of Keeling's CO2 level (NKL), positively contributes to congressional attention, while the Climate Extreme Index (CEI) does not affect media coverage and congressional activity. International focusing events (IFE) demonstrate significant attentiongrabbing power for both the news media and the US Congress. The difference is that the news media seem to respond to international focusing events more quickly than the Congress. As shown in Table 1, news media attention is significantly influenced by the current year's focusing event while congressional attention responds to previous year's focusing event. Scientific feedback, as reflected in net scientific publication (NSP), also exerts positive influence on both news media attention and congressional activity. Considering both the media and congressional models together, we see that, overall, the three attentiongrabbing factors—problem indicator, focusing event, and scientific feedback—do have more or less statistically significant power of drawing policy elites' attention, given the marginal effect of problem indictor on issue attention and the differences found in how these factors drive the two agendas. 7. Conclusion and Discussion Policy agenda setting is concerned with issue competition for attention. "Attentiveness" is a key concept in agenda setting theories to understand how new issues get recognized and considered in various policy venues. Many agenda studies focus on attentiveness itself and use attention to explain issue mobilization and policy change, but one less explored, yet important, question is where attention comes from. Our study, primarily guided by agenda setting theories, attempted to examine this question by exploring several major forces that drive news media and congressional attention to global climate change issue. Drawing hypotheses from Kingdon's, Jones and Baumgartner's as well as other agenda scholars' perspectives, we attempted to empirically assess whether and how problem indicators, focusing events/information shocks, and information feedback enhance issue attention. We also assessed the effect of attention inertia, inter-agenda connection between the news media and the Congress, and possible partisan advantage on controlling agenda access. Our data were collected from various sources, and VAR modeling was employed to conduct the hypothesis tests while controlling possible autocorrelations in multiple time series. Our VAR analyses showed that attention inertia, as found in many other issue fields, was a strong factor, positively associated with the level of attention paid to global climate change on both the media and congressional agendas. Contrary to some existing agenda studies, we found no long-term interagenda spillover effect between media attention and congressional attention to climate change during the 17 36-year period covered by our annual data series. Partisan advantage on issue status was also tested. Republican composition in Congress appeared to have an effect in restricting climate change issue, but the partisan impact was not statistically significant in the VAR model. For the attention-driving forces in Kingdon, Jones and Baumgartner, and other agenda setting theories, we generally found supportive evidence. One of the two real-world problem indicators (i.e., NKL) marginally contributed to a higher level of congressional activity on climate change. High-profile international events in the climate change field had very significant attention-grabbing power for both the media and congressional agendas. As expected, the news media tended to respond to international events instantaneously while the congressional reaction to these events showed a time lag. Both media attention and congressional attention to climate change were found to be also positively influenced by information feedback from the climate science community. Overall, our findings from the VAR modeling generally support the agenda theorists' argument on issue attention dynamics. While our test confirms the general story told by agenda theorists, the findings here suggest that the attention-grabbing factors may work differently for different policy venues. As shown in Table 1, Congress seems to be responsive to certain climate change conditions (i.e., the net change of CO2 levels in the atmosphere), while the news media are not sensitive to either of the two objective climate change indicators. Moreover, when both the news media and Congress are statistically influenced by climate science feedback, the US news media tend to respond to international focusing events more rapidly than the US Congress. This finding of varying effects of the attention-grabbing factors for different policy venues seems to be in line with the political information-processing model constructed by Jones and Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 13 Baumgartner (2005). For Jones and Baumgartner, policy organizations monitor and process incoming information about a public problem from multiple diverse sources (in our case, problem indicators, focusing events, and feedback). However, due to their limited attention span, constrained informationprocessing ability, differing organizational incentives and functionalities, and varying levels of sensitivity and receptivity, different policy venues tend to respond to the incoming information differently and selectively (Jones and Baumgartner 2005; see also Baumgartner and Jones 1993; Jones 1994; 2001). While the agenda theorists seem to be correct about the overall impact of attention-grabbing factors, how these attention-driving mechanisms may differ in different policy venues deserves further examination in future research. There are several other aspects that future agenda setting research should further explore. First, our study provided confirming evidence for attention dynamics within a specific issue domain—i.e., global warming and climate change, but whether attention mechanisms can be generalized and applied to other issue areas remains a question. Several existing studies indicate that attention-grabbing mechanisms may be quite different in different issue domains (Soroka 2002; Lawrence and Birkland 2004; see also Baumgartner and Jones 1993, 121-124). In their recent work, Jones and Baumgartner (2005, 208-226) demonstrated that, in certain issue areas such as macroeconomics or crime, the US media and Congress did respond to objective economic conditions or crime indicators; however, in other issue areas, such as social welfare, attention did not respond to the objective conditions of the social welfare problem. Future research should examine issue-specific attention mechanisms before making generalizations across issue areas. As Jones and Baumgartner pointed out in The Politics of Attention (2005, 226): "[I]n different issue areas we see different patterns, each of which makes sense on its own, but we detect no single pattern that characterizes all policy areas. A general model of policymaking will not emerge from the study of any single policy area." Next, our study focused on newspaper attention and congressional attention. It is not clear whether and how these attention-grabbing factors influence other agenda venues (such as the public, the president, and TV news networks). And it is also not clear how climate change attention in other venues 18 affects the news media and Congress, or vice versa. Moreover, our model attempted to assess the overall impact of Republican advantage in Congress, but it is not clear how specific ideological orientations and structural variables internal to congressional committees and subcommittees affect climate change issue attention. Other literature indicates that conservatism and partisan politics within and across relevant congressional committees and subcommittees could also play a critical role in determining congressional agenda setting. In addition, more in-depth case studies and detailed content analyses are needed to strengthen the assessment of causal effects between attention attractors and actual policy elites' attention. The attention-grabbing mechanisms and processes in real-world policy agenda setting are far more complex and dynamic than presented here. Although our study sheds some light on where attention may come from and how attention level may be affected by severity of problem indicator, focusing event and information feedback, it certainly leaves us with even more questions for future agenda setting research. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 14 NOTES 1. The agenda setting theory of Jones and Baumgartner is based on an information-processing and political decision making perspective. The major components of the theory can be found in a series of books written by Bryan Jones and Frank Baumgartner, jointly and separately (see Jones and Baumgartner 2005; Jones 1994, 2001; Baumgartner and Jones 1993). 2. As news articles may vary greatly in length, an alternative way to measure the media attention to climate change is to use the length of news articles. In a recent study, Liu, Vedlitz and Alston (2008) counted the lines of each article and aggregated the total lines of all articles every year to measure the issue attention over time. They found that the aggregation of the total lines of climate change articles each year is highly correlated with the simple aggregation of the number of articles of each year. In this study, we simply use the annual number of climate change articles in the New York Times to measure US news media attention to the climate change issue. 3. The additional keywords only brought in a very limited number of new articles. In addition, our review of these new articles from additional keywords search indicated that the search results contained a lot of 'noises' – i.e., articles irrelevant to climate change. 4. The Lexis-Nexis searchable news database was accessed at the following website: http://web.lexis-nexis.com/universe/form/academic/index.html. Our search procedures in LexisNexis under "Guided News Search" were as follows: (1) under "Step One: Select a news category," we selected "General News Search;" (2) for "Step Two: Select a News Source," we selected "Major Papers," and under "Source List," we selected "New York Times;" (3) under "Step Three: Enter search terms," there are three boxes to enter search terms, where we entered "climate change" in the first box, "global warming" in the second, and "greenhouse gas*" in the third while leaving the box reading "Headline, Lead Paragraph(s), Terms" as is, and changing the relational box "and" to "or." Note that the third key word "greenhouse gas*" is a wild-card term that also searches "greenhouse gases;" (4) under "Step Four: Narrow to a specific date range," we specified the search date range from January 1, 1969 to December 31, 2005. The search extracted all the articles in the New York Times defined by our search terms and dates. 5. The three online databases on US congressional hearings can be found at the following websites: (1) The Policy Agenda Project (directed by Bryan Jones of the University of Texas at Austin, John Wilkerson of the University of Washington and Frank Baumgartner of Pennsylvania State University): http://www.policyagendas.org; (2) Thomas—Legislative Information on the Internet: http://thomas.loc.gov; and (3) LexisNexis: http://web.lexis-nexis.com. 6. Keeling's CO2 data are available here: http://scrippsco2.ucsd.edu/data/atmospheric_co2.html. 7. The US CEI data was collected on March 6, 2006 from the NCDC ftp site: ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/cei. 8. Some climate scientists suggest that the intensity of hurricane is associated with rising sea surface temperatures that may be caused by global warming (Emanuel, 2005; Webster, et al. 2005; Hoyos, et al. 2006; Mann and Emanuel, 2006), but others question the accuracy of predicting more severe tropical cyclones as a result of warmer sea surface temperatures (Landsea, et al. 2006) or contend that the linkage between global warming and hurricane is inconclusive (Pielke, et al. 2005). 9. Three major reference documents were used in identifying the international focusing events: (1) "16 Years of Scientific Assessment in Support of the Climate Convention," Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2004; (2) "Milestones in Global Climate Change Policy," Chapter 4 in Transportation and Global Climate Change: A Review and Analysis of the Literature, US Department of Transportation, Publication No. DOT-T-97-03, 1998; and (3) "Convention Timeline and Protocol Timeline," United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, 2006. 10. We understand that identifying IFEs is somewhat arbitrary and involves subjective judgment. We attempted to review all the events listed in the reference documents closely and apply our operational definition as objectively as possible. Several events seemed to qualify and appeared in our initial list of IFEs, but after several rounds of additional review and deliberation, these were dropped from the final list. For example, the Conferences of Parties (COPs) to the UNFCCC occurs once every year, but we only counted the first three COPs as IFEs because the first three COPs were relatively "new" and "unprecedented." After the 1997 Kyoto Conference, COPs were mostly viewed as routine meetings and were not as highly publicized as the first three COPs. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 15 11. The Web of Science online searchable databases can be found at http://portal.isiknowledge.com. The SCI Expanded database, starting from 1900 forward, gathers information from more than 5,900 scholarly journals across 150 scientific disciplines. The SSCI database, beginning from 1956 forward, contains information from more than 1,725 scholarly journals across 50 social sciences disciplines. Both databases include multiple document types (article, abstract of published item, book review, etc.) in multiple languages. 12. We assumed that non-English language scientific publications, which comprised less than 2% of all climate change publications in the SCI and SSCI database, would have little influence on the US media and Congress. Most publications in English were authored or coauthored by US scientists. We performed our search two different ways – one for US author/coauthor only, and the other for both US and non-US authors. The two searches produced very similar results in terms of annual number of scientific publications. We choose to use the annual number of publications by both US and non-US climate scientists, because it is hardly conceivable that the US media and Congress would be responsive only to American scientists as important climate science contributions have been made by scientists from other countries (e.g., United Kingdom). 13. Both SCI and SSCI frequently update their databases when important new journals and other sources are introduced. The changing scope of SCI and SSCI over time does not comprise the validity of our measure for scientific publications, as the constant updating of both databases primarily reflects what have actually occurred over time in the scientific community in terms of the content and extend of scientific research. In other words, the changing scope of climate science production, as updated in both SCIS and SSCI databases, is exactly what we want to measure – the changing scope of scientific feedback. 14. We understand that the annual number of climate science publications by climate scientists may be, to some extent, a product of past media coverage and congressional activity on climate change issue: some research efforts may be influenced by what has been "hot" recently in the media, and some publications may be a direct result of research projects created and funded by Congress. However, for the purpose of this study, we simply treat the scientific feedback as an exogenous variable, as we would like to see if scientific feedback affects news media and congressional attentiveness to climate change. 15. Recall the debates and disagreements among agenda scholars on spillovers/interactions across policy venues in our earlier discussion. 16. We conducted the pre-estimation of lag-order selection tests for up to 4 lags, and found that only lag 1 had the optimal AIC, SBIC, FPE and HQIC with significant level < 0.01. Statistics for selection for any number of specified lags were obtained through the command "varsoc" in Stata 10.1. 17. Because our study focused on long-term trends and our data series were aggregated at an annual level, we could not exclude the possibility of sporadic interaction between these two agendas for certain time periods, or the possibility of inter-agenda connection based on shorterterm data aggregations (e.g., data aggregation at monthly level). 18. It is well known that former Vice President Al Gore played an important role in raising awareness of global warming, while during the administration of George W. Bush the climate change issue was substantially suppressed by the executive branch. Although it is likely that attention dynamics in other venues (e.g., the executive branch) may well influence the news media and congressional agendas, our analysis could not include these variables due to the constrain of data availability. Institute for Science, Technology and Public Policy Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University 16 REFERENCES Baumgartner, F.R., and B.D. 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