Social inequalities in news consumption

The expansion of media choice during the past years often results in those who are most interested consume more news, whereas those who are less interested increasingly tune out of news (Prior, 2005). Research has also found that the choices individual news users make are related to their social sta...

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Main Authors: Kalogeropoulos, A, Nielsen, R
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism 2017
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author Kalogeropoulos, A
Nielsen, R
author_facet Kalogeropoulos, A
Nielsen, R
author_sort Kalogeropoulos, A
collection OXFORD
description The expansion of media choice during the past years often results in those who are most interested consume more news, whereas those who are less interested increasingly tune out of news (Prior, 2005). Research has also found that the choices individual news users make are related to their social status (Lindell, 2017). This factsheet focuses on social inequalities in news consumption in the UK to address the question of whether inequality is increasing as we move to a more digital media environment. Based on survey data on offline and online news consumption and taking into account individual differences in social grade, we find that a) news consumption is more unequally distributed in the UK than income is b) online news consumption is more unequally distributed than offline news consumption c) there is greater social inequality in online news consumption than in offline news consumption.
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spelling oxford-uuid:206e21b7-fd14-4c09-8eaf-f15e019d40fc2024-11-11T09:15:14ZSocial inequalities in news consumptionReporthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_93fcuuid:206e21b7-fd14-4c09-8eaf-f15e019d40fcEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordReuters Institute for the Study of Journalism2017Kalogeropoulos, ANielsen, RThe expansion of media choice during the past years often results in those who are most interested consume more news, whereas those who are less interested increasingly tune out of news (Prior, 2005). Research has also found that the choices individual news users make are related to their social status (Lindell, 2017). This factsheet focuses on social inequalities in news consumption in the UK to address the question of whether inequality is increasing as we move to a more digital media environment. Based on survey data on offline and online news consumption and taking into account individual differences in social grade, we find that a) news consumption is more unequally distributed in the UK than income is b) online news consumption is more unequally distributed than offline news consumption c) there is greater social inequality in online news consumption than in offline news consumption.
spellingShingle Kalogeropoulos, A
Nielsen, R
Social inequalities in news consumption
title Social inequalities in news consumption
title_full Social inequalities in news consumption
title_fullStr Social inequalities in news consumption
title_full_unstemmed Social inequalities in news consumption
title_short Social inequalities in news consumption
title_sort social inequalities in news consumption
work_keys_str_mv AT kalogeropoulosa socialinequalitiesinnewsconsumption
AT nielsenr socialinequalitiesinnewsconsumption