Publication | Open Access
Explaining Journalists' Trust in Public Institutions Across 20 Countries: Media Freedom, Corruption, and Ownership Matter Most
70
Citations
39
References
2012
Year
Citizen JournalismPower DistancePublic OpinionCommunicationMedia StudiesJournalismMedia AccountabilitySocial SciencesInteractive JournalismJournalism EthicsPolitical CommunicationMedia InstitutionsPublic InstitutionsMedium OwnershipTrustOwnership MatterEditorial IndependenceTrust MetricMedia PoliciesMedia FreedomPublic TrustArtsMedia LawsPolitical Science
Building on the assumption that journalists' attitudes toward public institutions can contribute to a decline in public trust, this article sets out to identify the driving forces behind journalists' confidence in public institutions. Based on interviews with 2000 journalists from 20 countries, variation in trust is modeled across the individual level of journalists, the organizational level of news media, and the societal level of countries. Our findings suggest that the principal determinants of journalists' trust emanate from a country's political performance, from state ownership in the media, and from the extent to which people tend to trust each other. Journalism culture and power distance, however, seem to have relatively little weight in the calculus of journalists' institutional trust.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1