Nation Binding: How Public Service Broadcasting Mitigates Political Selective Exposure

Recent research suggests that more and more citizens select news and information that is congruent with their existing political preferences. This increase in political selective exposure (PSE) has allegedly led to an increase in polarization. The vast majority of studies stem from the US case with...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2016-05, Vol.11 (5), p.e0155112-e0155112
Hauptverfasser: Bos, Linda, Kruikemeier, Sanne, de Vreese, Claes
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description Recent research suggests that more and more citizens select news and information that is congruent with their existing political preferences. This increase in political selective exposure (PSE) has allegedly led to an increase in polarization. The vast majority of studies stem from the US case with a particular media and political system. We contend that there are good reasons to believe PSE is less prevalent in other systems. We test this using latent profile analysis with national survey data from the Netherlands (n = 2,833). We identify four types of media use profiles and indeed only find partial evidence of PSE. In particular, we find that public broadcasting news cross-cuts all cleavages. This research note offers an important antidote in what is considered a universal phenomenon. We do find, however, a relatively large segment of citizens opting out of news consumption despite the readily available news in today's media landscape.
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subjects Analysis
Biology and Life Sciences
Broadcasting
Broadcasting industry
Citizens
Communication
Consumption
Exposure
Humans
International economic relations
Mass Media
Medicine and Health Sciences
Netherlands
News
People and Places
Physical Sciences
Polarization
Political parties
Political science
Political systems
Politics
Public service
Research and Analysis Methods
Selective exposure
Social aspects
Social Sciences
title Nation Binding: How Public Service Broadcasting Mitigates Political Selective Exposure
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