Negotiating legitimacy: media publics and security policy in multi-ethnic Britain

Authors

  • Marie Gillespie

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30962/ec.189

Keywords:

Guerra do Iraque, Déficit de legitimidade, Audiências de programas

Abstract

The article examines how multi-ethnic publics debate questions of legitimacy. It explains the deep public scepticism surrounding the Iraq War (2003) and subsequent security policy, not just in terms of declining trust in the PM Tony Blair, but as a corrosive “legitimacy deficit” with significant implications for the prospects of participatory democracy and multicultural citizenship. The arguments are grounded in a collaborative ethnography of news audiences across the UK, including multilingual and multi-ethnic audiences. Using a Weberian framework, the article analyses the patterning of interviewees’ responses to the justifications given for going to war, and it assesses the implications of the “legitimacy deficit” for the UK and its international security policy.

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How to Cite

Gillespie, M. (2007). Negotiating legitimacy: media publics and security policy in multi-ethnic Britain. E-Compós, 10. https://doi.org/10.30962/ec.189

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Section

Special Issue