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Where populist citizens get the news: An investigation of news audience polarization along populist attitudes in 11 countries

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Version 2 2019-02-26, 10:23
Version 1 2018-08-15, 08:48
journal contribution
posted on 2019-02-26, 10:23 authored by Anne Schulz

This article presents a secondary analysis of two multi-national cross-sectional surveys conducted in 2015 (11 countries, N = 10,570) and 2017 (4 countries, N = 2165) to examine the relationship between populist attitudes and media use. The results indicate that populist citizens are more likely to consume news than non-populist citizens. Specifically, populist citizens exhibit a preference for commercial television (TV) news, as well as a tendency to read tabloid newspapers. While they use fewer quality newspapers, public TV news are not systematically avoided. Regarding the online news environment, populist citizens prefer Facebook over Twitter as a source of political information. This selective pattern will be discussed in light of the debates on news audience polarization and political polarization.

Funding

This research was funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation as part of the NCCR democracy project “Populism in the context of globalization and mediatization.” (grant number: 51NF40-151577)

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