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- Q5642995 subject Q6378398.
- Q5642995 subject Q6967838.
- Q5642995 subject Q7077035.
- Q5642995 subject Q8470847.
- Q5642995 abstract "Hallin's spheres refer to a theory of media coverage developed by communication scholar Daniel C. Hallin in his book The Uncensored War. It posits three areas of media coverage into which a topic may fall. Journalists cover each area with different rules of objectivity. The areas are diagrammed as concentric circles referred to as spheres. From innermost to outer most they are: the Sphere of Consensus, the Sphere of Legitimate Controversy, and the Sphere of Deviance.The idea is similar to a number of similar concepts, including especially the Overton Window, which posits a sliding scale of public opinion on any given issue ranging from conventional wisdom to unacceptable. Though the Hallin's Spheres theory is similar to the Overton Window, it is a theory of the press, not overall public opinion, and uses a clearer demarcation of areas of consensus vs. controversy.Hallinn's also more general conceptions of public understanding, such as framing, which offers a more general description of the presentation and reception of issues in public. For example, framing the use of certain drugs as criminal activity vs. a medical condition vs. personal choice can affect whether the public generally considers that behavior anti-social. There are also narrower conceptions, as with the idea of an opinion corridor, a phrase coined to describe the narrowing of public opinion in Sweden to exclude many opinions widely held by the populace. In Hallin's terms, a narrowing of the opinion corridor moves certain policies from the spheres of consensus or legitimate controversy into the sphere of deviance.".
- Q5642995 wikiPageExternalLink 14.
- Q5642995 wikiPageExternalLink atomization.html.
- Q5642995 wikiPageExternalLink the-sphere-of-deviance.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1415581.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q21809558.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q337980.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q3398794.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q4741508.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q5183938.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q540742.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q542950.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q54427.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q594739.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q6139875.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q6378398.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q6967838.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q7077035.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q7225126.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q8470847.
- Q5642995 wikiPageWikiLink Q876455.
- Q5642995 comment "Hallin's spheres refer to a theory of media coverage developed by communication scholar Daniel C. Hallin in his book The Uncensored War. It posits three areas of media coverage into which a topic may fall. Journalists cover each area with different rules of objectivity. The areas are diagrammed as concentric circles referred to as spheres.".
- Q5642995 label "Hallin's spheres".