Search results for "10240 Department of Communication and Media Research"

showing 5 items of 15 documents

Does the platform matter? Social media and COVID-19 conspiracy theory beliefs in 17 countries

2021

While the role of social media in the spread of conspiracy theories has received much attention, a key deficit in previous research is the lack of distinction between different types of platforms. This study places the role of social media affordances in facilitating the spread of conspiracy beliefs at the center of its enquiry. We examine the relationship between platform use and conspiracy theory beliefs related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Relying on the concept of technological affordances, we theorize that variation across key features make some platforms more fertile places for conspiracy beliefs than others. Using data from a crossnational dataset based on a two-wave online survey cond…

Sociology and Political ScienceCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)teorías conspirativasConspiracy theorysocial mediaaffordancesPandemia de COVID-19 2020-oferimentsCOVID-19 Pandemic 2020-10240 Department of Communication and Media Researchconspiracy theories3312 Sociology and Political SciencePandèmia de COVID-19 2020-Social mediateories conspirativesSociologypercepción erróneaAffordance070 News media journalism & publishingCOVIDCommunicationCOVID-19misperceptionsofrecimientosEpistemologyddc:19Mass communicationsKey (cryptography)percepció erròniaAffordances3315 Communication
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Measuring populism across nations: testing for measurement invariance of an inventory of populist attitudes

2019

Abstract The rising voter support for populist parties in Western Democracies in recent years has incited academic interest in populist voters and attitudes connected to the voting propensity of populist actors. In line of this research, numerous scales to measure populist attitudes among voters have been proposed. In most cases, however, the measurement of populist attitudes was tailored to specific countries and its applicability to cross-national research on populism was not assessed. This article uses a cross-national survey to assess the measurement invariance, reliability, and validity of a deductively developed inventory for populist attitudes. The findings suggest that there is a co…

Sociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050801 communication & media studies0506 political sciencePopulism0508 media and communications10240 Department of Communication and Media ResearchPolitical scienceVotingPolitical economy050602 political science & public administration10113 Institute of Political ScienceMeasurement invariance070 News media journalism & publishingmedia_common
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Measuring Populist Attitudes on Three Dimensions

2018

Theoretically, populism has been conceptualized as a political ideology with three sub-dimensions: anti-elitism attitudes, a preference for popular sovereignty, and a belief in the homogeneity and virtuousness of the people. However, empirical research to date has treated populist attitudes as a unidimensional construct. To address this issue, we propose to conceptualize populist attitudes as a latent higher-order construct with three distinct first-order dimensions. A 12-item inventory was developed using two survey studies conducted in Switzerland in 2014 and 2015. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to test the construct validity of this measure of populist attitudes. …

Sociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesConstruct validity050801 communication & media studies0506 political sciencePopulismPolitics0508 media and communicationsEmpirical research10240 Department of Communication and Media Research3312 Sociology and Political Science050602 political science & public administrationIdeologyPsychologySocial psychology070 News media journalism & publishingPopular sovereigntymedia_commonInternational Journal of Public Opinion Research
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How populist crisis rhetoric affects voters in Switzerland

2019

Right-wing populism has a long tradition in Switzerland. Nevertheless, only little is known about how populist messages in the media contribute to the success of the Swiss People’s Party (SVP) and to the acceptance of the party’s anti-immigration policies. In this study, we combine data from a large media content analysis (including newspapers and TV news shows) with data from a panel-survey in order to address this research gap. Thereby we differentiate between effects driven by the content and the form of right-wing populist communication. While right-wing populist content depicts immigrants and the political elite as a threat to the Swiss people, populist style evokes the sense of a cris…

media_common.quotation_subjectImmigrationSocial Sciencesimmigrantmedia effectsStyle (sociolinguistics)NewspaperPoliticsH10240 Department of Communication and Media ResearchantiOrder (exchange)Political scienceanti-immigrantlinkage analysis070 News media journalism & publishingmedia_commonCommunicationCommunication. Mass mediaP87-96populismPopulismcrisisPolitical economyRhetoricElite3315 CommunicationStudies in Communication Sciences
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We are the people and you are fake news: a social identity approach to populist citizens’ false consensus and hostile media perceptions

2018

This study aims to investigate the relationships between citizens’ populist attitudes, perceptions of public opinion, and perceptions of mainstream news media. Relying on social identity theory as an explanatory framework, this article argues that populist citizens assume that public opinion is congruent with their own opinion and that mainstream media reporting is hostile toward their own views. To date, only anecdotal evidence suggests that both assumptions are true. The relationships are investigated in a cross-sectional survey with samples drawn from four Western European countries ( N = 3,354). Multigroup regression analysis supports our hypotheses: False consensus and hostile media p…

media_common.quotation_subjectsocial identity theoryhostile media perceptions050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologySocial identity approachPublic opinion0508 media and communications10240 Department of Communication and Media ResearchPerceptionlanguage and linguisticsMainstream0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologySocial identity theorypopulist attitudesNews media070 News media journalism & publishing1203 Language and Linguisticsmedia_commonbusiness.industrycommunication05 social sciencesMedia studieslinguistics and languagepopulismPopulism3310 Linguistics and Languagefalse consensusFake newsbusiness3315 Communication
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