Content Analysis of Political Speeches
Content analysis of political speeches turns the public words of foreign-policy actors — leaders' addresses, UN General Assembly statements, parliamentary debates, press briefings — into systematic, comparable measures. Spanning classic human-coded content analysis and modern text-as-data methods surveyed by Grimmer and Stewart (2013), it lets researchers quantify what leaders say: their threat perceptions, hostility, cooperative or conflictual orientation, issue priorities, and rhetorical positions, so that rhetoric can be tracked over time, compared across actors, and related to behavior.
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Sources
- Grimmer, J., & Stewart, B. M. (2013). Text as data: The promise and pitfalls of automatic content analysis methods for political texts. Political Analysis, 21(3), 267–297. DOI: 10.1093/pan/mps028 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Content Analysis of Foreign-Policy Speeches and Statements. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/international-relations/content-analysis-speeches-ir
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