Publication | Closed Access
The Role of Perceptions of Media Bias in General and Issue-Specific Political Participation
68
Citations
82
References
2011
Year
Citizen JournalismPolitical ProcessPublic OpinionPublic ParticipationPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorCitizen ParticipationJournalismMedia StudiesSocial SciencesInteractive JournalismIssue-specific Political ParticipationMedia EffectsPolitical CommunicationPolitical CognitionCivic EngagementMedia InstitutionsMedia BiasMedium OwnershipGovernment CommunicationPolitical ParticipationGeneral Political ParticipationPolitical AttitudesPolitical AgendaMass CommunicationArtsPolitical Science
Despite a large body of literature documenting factors influencing general political participation, research has lagged in understanding what motivates participation regarding specific issues. Our research fills this gap by examining the interplay of perceptions of media bias, trust in government, and political efficacy on individuals' levels of general and issue-specific political participation. Using survey data with indicators related to general political participation, our results demonstrate that perceptions of media bias overall are negatively related to general political participation. Moreover, this relationship is an indirect one, mediated by trust in government and political efficacy. Using survey data with indicators of issue-specific political participation in the context of stem cell research, our results show that—contrary to the relationship found for general political participation—perceptions of media bias are directly and positively associated with issue-specific participation. Implications for political participation and media bias theories are discussed.
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