Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Riding the Tiger: Popular Organizations, Political Parties, and Urban Protest
- 2 Setting the Stage: Research Design, Case Selection, and Methods
- 3 The Limits of Loyalty
- 4 A Union Born Out of Struggles: The Union of Municipal Public Servants of São Paulo
- 5 Partisan Loyalty and Corporatist Control: The Unified Union of Workers of the Government of the Federal District
- 6 Clients or Citizens? Neighborhood Associations in Mexico City
- 7 Favelas and Cortiços: Neighborhood Organizing in São Paulo
- 8 The Dynamics of Protest
- Appendix
- Selected Sources
- Index
Appendix
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Riding the Tiger: Popular Organizations, Political Parties, and Urban Protest
- 2 Setting the Stage: Research Design, Case Selection, and Methods
- 3 The Limits of Loyalty
- 4 A Union Born Out of Struggles: The Union of Municipal Public Servants of São Paulo
- 5 Partisan Loyalty and Corporatist Control: The Unified Union of Workers of the Government of the Federal District
- 6 Clients or Citizens? Neighborhood Associations in Mexico City
- 7 Favelas and Cortiços: Neighborhood Organizing in São Paulo
- 8 The Dynamics of Protest
- Appendix
- Selected Sources
- Index
Summary
This appendix deals with problems of bias created by coding from newspaper accounts: the issues of bias created by newspaper preferences, bias caused by the coder, and bias created by missing information.
BIAS CREATED BY NEWSPAPER PREFERENCES
The newspapers themselves clearly differed in the kinds of events they reported, the way in which events were portrayed, and the attention they devoted to covering protest in general. The Leftist La Jornada in Mexico City was the hands-down champion of protest reporting, covering on average 71.3 percent of events. Reforma covered 51.4 percent of events on average. La Jornada had a large network of connections within many progressive movements, who informed their friends when a protest was occurring and expected favorable coverage. The sympathies of La Jornada were so well - known that many smaller groups actually picketed the offices of the newspaper, not to protest the paper's policies but to make sure reporters knew about their grievances. However, rates of coverage also varied widely by year, with no clear trend across time from which estimates of coverage could be extrapolated. In its worst year, Reforma covered 38.9 percent of events in the recorded record; in its best, 58.9 percent. La Jornada ranged between 58 percent and 77 percent of recorded events.
La Jornada accounts of protest were also more sympathetic to the protesters.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Urban Protest in Mexico and Brazil , pp. 173 - 181Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008