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Consuming a Foreign Africa: Outsourcing Knowledge Construction About Africa[ns] The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-12-12 j. Siguru Wahutu
This paper analyses the extent to which African journalism fields have outsourced the labor of knowledge construction to non-African actors. Focusing on the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi and the atrocities in Darfur between 2003 and 2008, it captures the extent to which both news organizations and journalists privileged narratives from Minority World Countries as they constructed knowledge about
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Risk Perceptions of Misinformation Exposure Across Platforms, Issues, Modalities, and Countries: A Comparative Study Across the Global North and South The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-12-07 Michael Hameleers, Marie Garnier Ortiz
Mis- and disinformation have been associated with detrimental political consequences, such as increasing ideological and epistemic polarization. Yet, we know little about how people perceive the risks of misinformation across countries and domains of information. As holding high-risk perceptions of encountering misinformation across domains may result in high levels of media cynicism and uncertainty
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“Your house won’t be yours anymore!” Effects of Misinformation, News Use, and Media Trust on Chile’s Constitutional Referendum The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-12-04 Magdalena Saldaña, Ximena Orchard, Sebastian Rivera, Guillermo Bustamante-Pavez
News consumption and voting behavior are interlinked and particularly important in elections where traditional political cleavages are not easily applicable. This relationship becomes more complex and uncertain in contexts of low trust in the news media and high levels of misinformation circulating in different news ecosystems. In this study, we test an indirect path between differentiated news media
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A left-right divide? Alternative news use and political trust, populist attitudes, and populist vote intentions in the case of Denmark The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-30 Miriam Kroman Brems
Many western democracies have witnessed an upsurge of partisan alternative media that explicitly challenge the legitimacy of mainstream media and politics alike and promote populist discourses. Accordingly, alternative media are often discussed in relation to lower levels of political trust and support for populist parties. Yet, only a limited number of studies have investigated these relationships
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Beyond Social Media: The Influence of News Consumption, Populism, and Expert Trust on Belief in COVID-19 Misinformation The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-30 Václav Štětka, Francisco Brandao, Fanni Tóth, Sabina Mihelj, Danilo Rothberg, Daniel Hallin, Beata Klimkiewicz, Paulo Ferracioli
The COVID-19 pandemic was accompanied by an unprecedented influx of misinformation often with adverse impact on the effectiveness of institutional responses to the health crisis. However, relatively little is still known about the factors that may have facilitated the proliferation and public acceptance of misinformation related to the virus or to the government’s anti-pandemic measures, particularly
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Exposure to Partisan News and Its Impact on Social Polarization and Vote Choice: Evidence From the 2022 Brazilian Elections The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Camila Mont’Alverne, Amy Ross Arguedas, Sayan Banerjee, Benjamin Toff, Richard Fletcher, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen
Studies have found limited evidence consistent with the theory that partisan and like-minded online news exposure have demonstrable effects on political outcomes. Most of this prior research, however, has focused on the particular case of the United States even as concern elsewhere in the world has grown about political parallelism in media content online, which has sometimes been blamed for heightened
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Picturing Peace Journalists: An Examination of Social Profiles and Professional Model Diffusion The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-15 Meagan E. Doll
Changes in global journalism are reflected in myriad cross-national professionalization efforts, including the development and exportation of models for journalism practice. Literature on peace journalism, for instance, suggests that its adaptation across contexts is shaped by forces on several levels, including the influence of individual media practitioners. However, little research examines those
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Reporting from the Outside While Looking In: Iranian Diaspora Journalists and #WomanLifeFreedom The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-09 Sara Shaban, Soheil Kafiliveyjuyeh
Following the death of twenty-two-year-old Mahsa Jina Amini, tens of thousands of protestors took to the streets in Iran—and the whole world watched through their screens. Several Iranian diaspora journalists stepped up to cover the events in Iran for western news outlets. In this study, we interviewed fourteen Iranian diaspora journalists on how they define their role when reporting on Iran and how
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Brexit and the Iraq War on BBC Question Time: Demographic and Political Issue Representation in UK Public Participation Broadcasting The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-08 Heinz Brandenburg, Brian Paul Boyle, Yulia Lemesheva
Public broadcasters are bound by strict guidelines to ensure balance in representing different demographic and political groups, and to better reflect the distribution of these characteristics within the public and political elites. How are these decisions affected when the biggest political issues of the day create further cleavages that not only cross-cut existing divides but also deserve representation
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Beyond “Lügenpresse”: How Politicians Criticize and Delegitimize the Media in Germany The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-05 Lina Buttgereit, Michael Hameleers, Katjana Gattermann, Andreas Schuck
Media criticism is a crucial part of meta-journalistic discourse, ensuring that journalists adhere to their democratic functions, such as informing citizens in an honest and complete manner. However, the profession increasingly faces hostile, nonevidence-based attacks from politicians that attempt to strategically fuel distrust among citizens and delegitimize opposed viewpoints. Despite this reality
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The Austrian Political Advertisement Scandal: Patterns of “Journalism for Sale” The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-10-21 Paul Balluff, Jakob-Moritz Eberl, Sarina Joy Oberhänsli, Jana Bernhard-Harrer, Hajo G. Boomgaarden, Andreas Fahr, Martin Huber
Mounting concern surrounds the influence of political actors on journalism, especially as media outlets face increasing financial pressures. These circumstances can give rise to instances of media capture, a mutually corrupting relationship between political actors and media organizations. However, empirical evidence substantiating such mechanisms and their consequences remains limited, particularly
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Not All Protests are Created Equal to be News: Does Mobile Digital Connectivity Level the Playing Field in the Hybrid Media System? The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-10-17 Frankie Ho Chun Wong
This study investigates how digital connectivity may influence news coverage of protests globally. Scholars argue that the arrival of the digital age did not overthrow legacy media but built a hybrid media system where old and new media logics work together. Although some recent studies highlighted that mobile internet access enabled protestors to gain media attention internationally, evidence also
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Multinational and Multimodal Character Framing of Political Candidates in Online News: Do Political and Media System Classifications Matter? The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-30 Dennis Steffan, Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Umberto Famulari
An evolving body of research generally referred to as visual politics has brought the heavy research focus on linguistic modalities of political communication closer to parity with visual emphasis. The study reported here transcends this schism by joining momentum toward multimodality as an ontological departure point for research. We expanded an existing visual instrument into a multimodal one and
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Heaven Holds a Place for Those Who Pray: Instrumentalizing Religion and Disinformation the 2022 Brazilian and 2023 Turkish Presidential Campaigns The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-30 James Fitzgerald, Ayse D. Lokmanoglu, Debora Salles, Rose Marie Santini
This comparative study examines the interplay of religious messaging and disinformation in the election campaign material of Jair Bolsonaro and Recep Tayyip Erdogan for the 2022 Brazilian and 2023 Turkish presidential elections. We employ a mixed-methods approach, combining computational keyword filtering and content analysis with qualitative discourse analysis and applied to a corpus of 10,519 posts
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How Does Topical Diversity Affect Source Credibility? Fact-Checking Coverage of Politics, Science, and Popular Culture The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-27 Hwayong Shin
News sources that correct misinformation seek to foster an informed citizenry and promote democratic accountability. One such effort is being made by fact-checking sites across the globe. However, public trust in these outlets remains limited. Is their politics-focused coverage one factor behind the limited trust? Politics-focused coverage highlights partisan competition, which can harm credibility
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Combating Disinformation With News Literacy Interventions: An Experimental Study on the Framing Effects of News Literacy Messages The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-21 Patrick F. A. van Erkel, Peter van Aelst, Joren Van Nieuwenborgh, Claes H. de Vreese, Michael Hameleers, David N. Hopmann
Despite increasing academic attention, several questions about news literacy messages (NLM) remain unanswered. First, it remains unclear how differences in the framing of the NLMs may influence their effectiveness. Second, we still know little about how NLMs work and, in particular, whether people also adopt the recommendations they are given. To answer these questions, this study conducts an experiment
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What Am I Doing Here? Self-Reflexivity in Cross-Border Journalism Research The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-18 Saumava Mitra, Lindsay Palmer, Soomin Seo
In journalism research conducted in the Global South, power relationships between the researcher and the researched mirror the uneven power structures between the Western journalists and their news subjects or their non-Western colleagues working alongside them. But so far, the figure of the journalism researcher in such contexts has not been problematized to any great extent in journalism scholarship
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Drowning Out Dissent: The Thai Military’s Quest to Fabricate Popular Support on Twitter The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Chonlawit Sirikupt
Why and how do autocracies discursively conduct digital astroturfing against their populations? As these regimes increasingly co-opt social media to manipulate online political discourse, the current political disinformation literature continues to privilege a Cold War paradigm, focusing on countries that dominate Western foreign policy priorities and concerns. Its normative underpinnings overshadow
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A Common Effort: New Divisions of Labor Between Journalism and OSINT Communities on Digital Platforms The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Timothy Charlton, Anna-Theresa Mayer, Jakob Ohme
This article explores the interactions between journalistic actors and emerging open-source intelligence and investigation (OSINT) communities. It employs qualitative content analysis of discourse from two OSINT communities surrounding three events following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, which received substantial coverage in news media. OSINT practices are rapidly becoming a mainstay of
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Does Russian Propaganda Lead or Follow? Topic Coverage, User Engagement, and RT and Sputnik’s Agenda Influence on US Media The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-08-28 Yunkang Yang, Stefan McCabe, Matthew Hindman
Russian state propaganda outlets Russia Today (RT) and Sputnik are an important part of Russian foreign policy and key global sources of disinformation. Previous work has argued that they focus on exploiting social divisions among foreign audiences and worried that Russian propaganda may influence the broader media agenda. To date, though, there has been no comprehensive study of what RT and Sputnik
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Public Critique by Journalists and Politicians as a Process of Democratic Legitimization The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-08-12 Cédric Tant
This theoretical article takes a fresh look at the relationship between journalists and politicians, based on the public critique they level at each other. It proposes that this critique should be seen not simply as the expression of reproaches between rival actors, but as a meaningful metadiscursive articulation. Public critique means, for example, defining journalism, politics, democracy, or a particular
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“We Follow the Disinformation”: Conceptualizing and Analyzing Fact-Checking Cultures Across Countries The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-08-12 Daniela Mahl, Jing Zeng, Mike S. Schäfer, Fernando Antonio Egert, Thaiane Oliveira
Democratic societies inherently depend on an informed citizenry. By shaping citizens’ voting behavior, fostering political cynicism, and reducing trust in institutions, misinformation can pose significant challenges to individuals and societies. Against this backdrop, fact-checking initiatives aimed at verifying the accuracy of publicly disseminated (mis)information have flourished worldwide. However
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How Much Tailoring Is too Much? Voter Backlash on Highly Tailored Campaign Messages The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-07-30 Christina Gahn
Findings on whether voters like or dislike targeted campaign messages have been contradictory. I argue that voters react differently depending on how precisely the targeted messages are tailored to them, and tailoring can potentially become “too much.” I corroborate this claim with the results of a factorial survey experiment among a representative sample of the German voting population ( N = 3,217)
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“It Forces You to Publish Some Shit”: Toward a Taxonomy of De-Democratizing Journalistic Practices The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-07-30 Ricardo Ribeiro Ferreira
Several studies argue that journalism can facilitate and shape democratic backsliding when news organizations are captured by business and political elites. Under these conditions, journalists will likely fail to hold political actors to account and provide information essential for public deliberation. Gradually, news outlets devolve to provide unfair representations based on private interests instead
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Journalism Practices in Western and Muslim Majority Countries: Culture Matters The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-07-27 Basyouni Ibrahim Hamada, Abdel-Salam G Abdel-Salam, Saba Bebawi
In this article, we suggest that the ideological cultural forces explain the differences in journalism practices in Western and Muslim majority countries (MMC). It is argued that the norms, values, and the deep political culture of the West and MMC have been materialized leading to different types of journalism practices. The statistical analysis of 11,246 interviews from twenty four Western and MMC
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When Information Subsidies Go Live: Conceptualizing the Strategic Role of Personal Storytelling The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-07-23 Kjersti Thorbjørnsrud
This conceptual article argues that the strategic use of personal storytelling to attract public attention and gain political impact is insufficiently theorized in political communication, journalism studies, and lobbying research. Claiming the need to study backstage relations among interest groups, professional communication workers, journalists, and decision-makers, it conceptualizes how lay personal
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The Influences of Misinformation on Incidences of Politically Motivated Violence in Europe The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-06-25 Mina Rulis
Misinformation has become increasingly prevalent in online media. Transnational misinformation, in particular, poses an increasing threat to the security and stability of modern nation-states. To this end, at least some anecdotal evidence suggests a direct relationship between misinformation and domestic acts of politically motivated violence. Yet, such claims lack systematic empirical evidence, especially
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Media Use, Feelings of Being Devalued, and Democratically Corrosive Sentiment in the US The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-05-23 Bruce Bimber, Julien Labarre, Daniel Gomez, Ilia Nikiforov, Karolina Koc-Michalska
We take two approaches to understanding democratically corrosive sentiment (DCS) in the US, which we operationalize in terms of populist attitudes, conspiracy beliefs, and expectation of fraud in the next election. Our first approach is media use, which is not well understood as a correlate of DCS beyond generalities about the harms of social media and partisan news. We distinguish between mainstream
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Book Review: Antiracist Journalism: The Challenge of Creating Equitable Local News by Andrea Wenzel The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-05-06 Paula M. Poindexter
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The Influence of Sexism and Incivility in WhatsApp Political Discussions on Affective Polarization: Evidence from a 2022 Multi-Party Election in India The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-04-10 Taberez Ahmed Neyazi, Ozan Kuru, Subhayan Mukerjee
In contemporary political discourse, the concern of affective polarization, often fueled by uncivil and sexist discourse, is notably evident in digital communication contexts like WhatsApp. In this study, we examined the potential effects of uncivil and sexist messages as well as moderator interventions against these messages coming from political in- and out-group members in such political groups
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Stepping on Toes? Role Dynamics between Journalists and Lobbyists Regarding Big Tech’s Accountability Agenda The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-30 Alexandra Schwinges, Irina Lock, Toni G. L. A. van der Meer, Rens Vliegenthart
The expanding political role of Big Tech(nology) corporations has triggered concerns about the role of the media in holding corporate power to account. This study provides a comprehensive understanding of role dynamics between journalists and lobbyists toward the agenda for Big Tech’s responsibilities. Based on semi-structured interviews with European journalists ( n = 15) and lobbyists representing
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Safeguarding the Peaceful Transfer of Power: Pro-Democracy Electoral Frames and Journalist Coverage of Election Deniers During the 2022 U.S. Midterm Elections The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Heesoo Jang, Daniel Kreiss
This study develops a new normative and analytical framework of “democracy-framed electoral coverage” grounded in literatures that stress the role of governmental and communicative institutions in protecting democracies from threats. We define “democracy-framed electoral coverage” as journalism that embraces fairly contested elections as an established norm and political ideal, and clearly alerts the
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Presidential Authority and the Legitimation of Far-Right News The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Allison M. N. Archer, Carolyn E. Schmitt, Shannon C. McGregor, Heesoo Jang
What position do far-right news outlets occupy in contemporary U.S. politics, and how did Trump use the power of the presidency to contribute to their rise among Republican legislators and mainstream American media? We posit that Trump’s position as president, in conjunction with his populist communication style that favored far-right outlets, contributed to the legitimation of such outlets. We first
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After Deception: How Falling for a Deepfake Affects the Way We See, Hear, and Experience Media The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-13 Teresa Weikmann, Hannah Greber, Alina Nikolaou
With the emergence of artificial intelligence, deepfakes have rendered it possible to manipulate anyone’s and anything’s audio-visual representation, adding fuel to the discussion about the believability of what we hear and see in the news. However, we do not know yet whether deepfakes can actually impact (1) the credibility attributed to audio-visual media in general, as well as (2) the perceived
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Who Relies on Social Media Influencers for Political Information? A Cross-Country Study Among Youth The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-12 Darian Harff, Desiree Schmuck
Social media influencers (SMIs) are defined as regular individuals who become well-known via self-branding on social media. Youth use content posted by SMIs not just for entertainment, but also for political information. However, we know little about which groups of young people are most likely to be exposed to their political messages or why some youth seem to favor SMIs’ political information over
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Source Matters? Exploring the Effects of Source Congeniality on Corrections of False Information on Twitter The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Luxuan Wang, Lauren Feldman
This study examines the impact of source congeniality and its interaction with partisanship on the effectiveness of debunking false information on Twitter in the United States. Conducted in February 2022, a survey experiment revealed that most respondents paid little attention to correction source information. Politically congenial sources failed to enhance the effectiveness of corrective tags, whereas
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Give the Media What They Need: Negativity as a Media Access Tool for Politicians The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Željko Poljak
Recent studies indicate that politicians’ negativity usage fails to enhance their approval ratings among the general public, yet politicians regularly use it. This begs the following question: why are politicians so negative if this strategy does not bolster their prospects for re-election? In this paper, I argue that the media, driven by audience engagement, plays a pivotal role in shaping politicians’
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Why do Citizens Choose to Read Fact-Checks in the Context of the Russian War in Ukraine? The Role of Directional and Accuracy Motivations in Nineteen Democracies The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-02-29 Marina Tulin, Michael Hameleers, Claes de Vreese, Toril Aalberg, Nicoleta Corbu, Patrick Van Erkel, Frank Esser, Luisa Gehle, Denis Halagiera, David Nicolas Hopmann, Karolina Koc-Michalska, Jörg Matthes, Sabina Mihelj, Christian Schemer, Vaclav Stetka, Jesper Strömbäck, Ludovic Terren, Yannis Theocharis
The recent surge of false information accompanying the Russian invasion of Ukraine has re-emphasized the need for interventions to counteract disinformation. While fact-checking is a widely used intervention, we know little about citizen motivations to read fact-checks. We tested theoretical predictions related to accuracy-motivated goals (i.e., seeking to know the truth) versus directionally-motivated
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Imagined Journalists: New Framework for Studying Media–Audiences Relationship in Populist Times The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-02-24 Ayala Panievsky, Yossi David, Noam Gidron, Lior Sheffer
These are challenging times for journalists’ relationship with their audiences. Attacks against “the media” and the increasing weaponization of social media to harass journalists have drawn the attention of scholars worldwide. In the current climate, journalists are not only distrusted but also hated, which creates a series of distinct ramifications. In this article, we suggest a new framework to study
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Conduits of the Kremlin’s Informational Influence Abroad? How German-Language Alternative Media Outlets Are Connected to Russia’s Ruling Elites The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Arista Beseler, Florian Toepfl
Extant research on alternative media in Western democracies has focused on scrutinizing their content, organization, production, and audiences. However, the extent to which alternative outlets are linked to powerful foreign actors has not yet been analyzed, despite the fact that a plethora of outlets have openly sided with Russia after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, spreading
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The Colors of the Populist Radical Right: The Strategic Use of Hue and Saturation in Party Logos The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-02-10 Luigi Curini, Benjamin Moffitt, Mattia Zulianello
Populist radical right (PRR) parties tend to stress their differences from other parties. Yet at the same time, PRR parties have increasingly sought to integrate into party systems across the globe. In seeking to understand the way that PRR parties negotiate this paradoxical situation, the literature tends to focus on their policy offerings or discourse. We, on the contrary, investigate an underestimated
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When Social Media Attack: How Exposure to Political Attacks on Social Media Promotes Anger and Political Cynicism The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-29 Ariel Hasell, Audrey Halversen, Brian E. Weeks
Political cynicism is rising in many democracies throughout the world. At the same time, people increasingly use social media to access news and political information. However, much of the political content people see on these platforms is hostile, uncivil, and attacking. This study examines whether exposure to these political attacks on social media is associated with political cynicism and, if so
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Populism as “Truth”: How Mediated Authenticity Strengthens the Populist Message The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Gunn Enli
The rise of populism is often explained by political factors, economic factors, and media and communication factors. This article analyzes populism in the context of an increased focus on authenticity in political communication. The main aim is to discuss to what degree mediated authenticity strengthens the populist message and what consequences the nexus between authenticity and populism might have
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Beyond Media Systems: Corporate-Consensus and Confrontational Media Regimes in Three Latin American Cases The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Manuel Alejandro Guerrero, Mariana Sanchez-Santos, Eduardo Pérez Otaño
The term captured-liberal has been proposed as an approach to Latin American media systems. Here, we contend these systems result from the region’s particular democratization path (i.e., competitive and open access to power but a flawed exercise of power). We also contend that since media systems operate at structural levels, the concept does not seem flexible enough to explain conjunctural variations
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Success or Failure? News Framing of the COP26 Glasgow Summit and its Effects on Citizens’ Beliefs About Climate Change The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Per Oleskog Tryggvason, Adam Shehata
The UN climate summits represent decisive moments for climate change policy. Under significant media coverage, world leaders gather for intense negotiations over policies to address global warming. Given the enormous political, economic, and environmental issues at stake, news media typically frame these summits in terms of success or failure. Still, we know surprisingly little about how these mediated
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Engaging With Fandom and Politics: The Case of Giuseppe Conte’s Fans on Instagram The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-08 Donatella Campus, Marco Mazzoni, Roberto Mincigrucci
The article focuses on the phenomenon of political fandom and its potential impact on citizens’ political engagement. In particular, our research intends to offer a contribution to the discussion of possible types of online fan-like attachment to a political leader. Our case study is the Instagram account @lebimbedigiuseppeconte, a fanpage celebrating the former Italian Prime minister Giuseppe Conte
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Fostering Bottom-Up Censorship From the Top-Down: Nationalism and Media Restrictions The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-05-11 Nicole Anderson, Aerin Commins, Jenifer Whitten-Woodring
From US President Donald Trump’s Tweet labeling news media “the enemy of the people” to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s establishment of a politically appointed Media Authority, media freed...
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What Can We Learn From the Short History of Independent Media in Serbia? Radio B92, George Soros, and New Models of Media Development The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-05-11 Janet Steele
Radio B92 was an iconic independent media institution in Serbia. Founded in 1989, B92 provided Belgrade listeners with subversive rock music, high-quality journalism, and independent perspectives o...
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“Repressed Opposition Media” or “Tools of Hybrid Warfare”? Negotiating the Boundaries of Legitimate Journalism in Ukraine Prior to Russia's Full-Scale Invasion The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-04-03 Kostiantyn Yanchenko, Alona Shestopalova, Gerret von Nordheim, Katharina Kleinen-von Königslöw
In transitional democracies, the boundary work of defining journalism and through this, ousting certain media actors as illegitimate and threatful to national security and/or democratic stability c...
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“I Don’t Think That’s True, Bro!” Social Corrections of Misinformation in India The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Sumitra Badrinathan, Simon Chauchard
Fact-checks and corrections of falsehoods have emerged as effective ways to counter misinformation online. But in contexts with encrypted messaging applications (EMAs), corrections must necessarily...
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Challenging the Global Cultural Conflict Narrative: An Automated Content Analysis on How PerPetrator Identity Shapes Worldwide News Coverage of Islamist and Right-Wing Terror Attacks The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-22 Chung-hong Chan, Hartmut Wessler, Marc Jungblut, Kasper Welbers, Scott Althaus, Joseph Bajjalieh, Wouter van Atteveldt
Recent terrorist attacks such as the Christchurch mosque attacks in 2019 renew the discussion of whether right-wing attacks are reported less negatively than Islamist attacks. To clarify this point...
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News Can Help! The Impact of News Media and Digital Platforms on Awareness of and Belief in Misinformation The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 Sacha Altay, Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Richard Fletcher
Does the news media exacerbate or reduce misinformation problems? Although some news media deliberately try to counter misinformation, it has been suggested that they might also inadvertently, and ...
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A New Protest Paradigm: Toward a Critical Approach to Protest News Analyses The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-03 Summer Harlow, Danielle K. Brown
Decades after the development of the “protest paradigm,” scholarship continues to question the applicability of the paradigm under different circumstances, rather than pushing forward a more holist...
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Populism and Critical Incidents in Journalism: Has Bolsonaro Disrupted the Mainstream Press in Brazil? The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-01 Francisco Paulo Jamil Marques
Despite the increasing number of studies examining the conflicts between the media and populist leaders, understanding how such clashes prompt shifts in journalism norms and practices remains to be...
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‘Keeping an Eye on the Other Side’ RT, Sputnik, and Their Peculiar Appeal in Democratic Societies The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-18 Charlotte Wagnsson, Torsten Blad, Aiden Hoyle
The reach of illiberal international propaganda outlets rests on citizens in democratic countries as recipients and potential disseminators. However, little research has scrutinised the audiences f...
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The Medium and the Message in Argentina's Presidential Campaigns The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-05 Kevin Pallister, Erin Fitzpatrick
Do campaigns message to voters consistently across different media? And do competing candidates tend to converge over time on a single national style of campaign messaging? To address these questio...
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Just a “Mouthpiece of Biased Elites?” Populist Party Sympathizers and Trust in Czech Public Service Media The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2022-12-06 Klára Smejkal, Jakub Macek, Lukáš Slavík, Jan Šerek
Existing research indicates that people with populist attitudes express lower trust in media, especially in Public Service Media. It is assumed that these people are alienated because of their valu...
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Gender Imbalance in the Media: Time Lag or Hysteresis?—French Newspapers, Gender Parity Shocks, and the Long and Winding Road to the Demasculinization of Political Reporting (1990–2020) The International Journal of Press/Politics (IF 4.1) Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Gilles Bastin
A large corpus of scientific literature details how the media generates an imbalance in their portrayal of society and thus contributes to the reproduction of extant power structures, particularly ...