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This dissertation examines how information is translated into issue
definitions. Issue definitions---the way that policy issues are
understood---have long been noted to be important for policy
choices. In this project, I develop a model of issue definitions where
issues are understood as a function of the various dimensions of the
issue weighted by the importance of each dimension. I then incorporate
this model into the theory of information processing developed by
Jones and Baumgartner (2005). The theory of information processing
posits that information can be understood as signals in the
policymaking environment, and information processing is the collection
and prioritizing of those signals. In this dissertation, I model
these information signals as the salience of each dimension of an
issue.
Using the case of used nuclear fuel (UNF) management, this dissertation test
hypotheses about the nature of issue definitions and policy change,
institutions, and policy actors. Specifically, I estimate the
dimensions of the UNF issue using latent Dirichlet allocation, a type
of quantitative text analysis. Following the development of the UNF
dimensions, I test hypotheses about how the salience of these dimensions are related
to policy change, how institutional structures influence dimension
salience, and how policy actors systematically highlight some
dimensions over others.