How Brexit referendum voters use news

It’s been over three years since the United Kingdom narrowly voted to leave the European Union in June 2016 – and the role the news media played during the referendum campaign, and during the subsequent negotiations, continues to be debated. <br> People ask, for example, whether new forms of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fletcher, R, Selva, M
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism 2019
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author Fletcher, R
Selva, M
author_facet Fletcher, R
Selva, M
author_sort Fletcher, R
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description It’s been over three years since the United Kingdom narrowly voted to leave the European Union in June 2016 – and the role the news media played during the referendum campaign, and during the subsequent negotiations, continues to be debated. <br> People ask, for example, whether new forms of online communication swung the result in favour of leave, whether parts of the news media are structurally biased towards a particular worldview, and whether people’s understanding of the EU has been shaped by decades of partisan coverage. The scope and magnitude of these questions can be daunting – especially given that we lack basic facts about how those on different sides typically access news. <br> In this factsheet, we have compared the current media habits of those who voted to remain with those who voted to leave. In doing so, we uncover patterns that challenge some widely held assumptions.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0e55e04e-a99b-49c0-860e-959fa51ccd9c2024-11-18T14:50:26ZHow Brexit referendum voters use newsReporthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_93fcuuid:0e55e04e-a99b-49c0-860e-959fa51ccd9cEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordReuters Institute for the Study of Journalism2019Fletcher, RSelva, MIt’s been over three years since the United Kingdom narrowly voted to leave the European Union in June 2016 – and the role the news media played during the referendum campaign, and during the subsequent negotiations, continues to be debated. <br> People ask, for example, whether new forms of online communication swung the result in favour of leave, whether parts of the news media are structurally biased towards a particular worldview, and whether people’s understanding of the EU has been shaped by decades of partisan coverage. The scope and magnitude of these questions can be daunting – especially given that we lack basic facts about how those on different sides typically access news. <br> In this factsheet, we have compared the current media habits of those who voted to remain with those who voted to leave. In doing so, we uncover patterns that challenge some widely held assumptions.
spellingShingle Fletcher, R
Selva, M
How Brexit referendum voters use news
title How Brexit referendum voters use news
title_full How Brexit referendum voters use news
title_fullStr How Brexit referendum voters use news
title_full_unstemmed How Brexit referendum voters use news
title_short How Brexit referendum voters use news
title_sort how brexit referendum voters use news
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