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Social Policy 4.4

Poorer Swedes tune out news online far more than wealthy peers

A 10,000-person study reveals that people with lower economic and cultural capital are significantly more likely to avoid digital news entirely—a finding that challenges how policymakers and media organizations think about the "news avoidance" problem. The gap suggests inequality shapes not just what people read, but whether they engage with news at all.

Originaltitel: Disconnecting from digital news: News avoidance and the ignored role of social class

Abstrakt

<p>While research on news avoidance has surged in the last couple of decades, we are still at a scholarly shortage in terms of understanding and theorizing the relationship between social class and the inclination to tune out on the news. In addressing this gap, we rely on a mail-back survey with ten thousand Swedes to study how social class predicts the likelihood of avoiding news from different digital outlets. Results show that people at lower social positions, measured as their relative lack of cultural and economic capital, are significantly more likely to avoid online news. A lack of cultural capital predicts total news avoidance online, avoiding online public service news and the "quality news," while it lessens the likelihood of avoiding "popular news" online. Lacking economic capital predicts total news avoidance online and avoiding the "popular news." We conclude the article with three cultural sociological lessons for the study of news avoidance. We call for sensitivity in regard to (1) the multi-dimensional character of social inequality, (2) the symbolic value of different types of news genres and outlets, and (3) social inequality in the normative problematizations of news avoidance.</p>

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