This article discusses the relation between Chilean youth media consumption patterns and their disposition to vote. In this context, to what extent does news consumption and entertainment by Chilean youth influence their political participation patterns? Based on data from a national survey (N=1.000) of young individuals between 18 and 29 years old in the three major urban cities in Chile, we conclude that individuals' news consumption and Facebook use are positively related to their disposition to vote. However, the consumption of entertainment news has a negative effect on individuals' political participation practices.
Introduction - the project -- Race, racism and race logic -- Social justice and intersectionality in sport, physical activity and health pedagogy: creating connections -- Why is our PE teacher education curriculum white? a collaborative self-study of teaching about race in PETE programmes -- Stories of difference and sameness: South Asian, Muslim young women talk physical education, -- Athleticising young black lives: confusing education with commerce in high school sports -- "Playing the game" and "finding my way": minority ethnic female PE teachers' counter-stories -- Race logic in American college sports: athletic exploitation, privilege and institutional resentment -- Challenging the stereotypical construction of black physical superiority and intellectual inferiority in sport -- Le parkour, freerunning and young white men: identities, resistances and digital representations -- Sport and the normalisation of Australian aboriginal peoples -- British Asians, racial framing and football exclusion -- Physicality and health inequalities in British Pakistani Muslim women: analysis of a participatory theatre-based play -- Decolonising health in education: considering Indigenous knowledge in policy documents -- The "health gap" from a social justice perspective: critical race theory, post colonialism, and post-feminism.