Mass Media in Greenland: The Politics of Survival
In: Ethnic Minority Media: An International Perspective, S. 44-62
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In: Ethnic Minority Media: An International Perspective, S. 44-62
In: Political Communication
In: Governing the UK in the 1990s, S. 155-176
In: American Culture and Society since the 1930s, S. 124-133
In: The Routledge Handbook of War and Society
In: The SAGE Handbook of Political Communication, S. 387-398
In: Understanding Representation, S. 106-129
In: Culture and Politics, S. 150-174
In: The Mass Media & Social Problems, S. 143-156
In: 23. Deutscher Soziologentag 1986: Sektions- und Ad-hoc-Gruppen, S. 313-316
In: 23. Deutscher Soziologentag 1986 in Hamburg: Beiträge der Sektions- und Ad-hoc-Gruppen, S. 313-316
In: Intimate Politics, S. 197-229
In: Extreme Speech and Democracy, S. 608-630
In: Political Communication
The erosion of media trust raises concerns about the ways in which the conduit of political information could undermine citizens' trust in democracy. While a large body of research in western democracies shows that media trust is contingent on specific media-system, political and cultural factors pertaining to national contexts, little is known about the sources of media trust in the new democracies from Central and Eastern Europe. Based on statistical analyses of public opinion surveys, this research tests if levels of trust in various traditional (television, radio, written press) and alternative mediums (Internet and online social networks) are differentiated along political party lines and depending on media consumption patterns in post-communist Romania. The results reveal a stronger association between trust in political parties and trust in traditional mediums, while trust in online media is more strongly linked to consumption patterns. These findings have practical, theoretical and normative implications for the functioning of democracy in post-communist societies.
In: Active Citizen Participation in E-Government, S. 497-509