Political Power Sharing and Crosscutting Media Exposure: How Institutional Features Affect Exposure to Different Views

Authors

  • Laia Castro University of Zürich
  • Lilach Nir Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Keywords:

crosscutting exposure, comparative, power sharing, survey, news media

Abstract

Previous research shows that power-sharing political systems are associated with (a) individual perceptions of political inclusiveness and (b) a more deliberative news media supply. Little, however, is known about the effect of this institutional feature on exposure to crosscutting views through the media. We posit that political systems provide different degrees of institutional power and public visibility to political parties and minorities, and this difference affects crosscutting news exposure. Survey data from three countries (N = 5,500 individuals) show that media contribute more to crosscutting exposure in a consensus system (Italy) than a polarized pluralist variant of majoritarianism (Spain), or a hegemonic illiberal democracy (Mexico). Additionally, analyses reveal that minority views are positively correlated with crosscutting media exposure in a consensus system and a polarized pluralist variant of majoritarianism, but not in a hegemonic system. These findings suggest that certain political system characteristics can override the tendency for selective exposure.

Author Biographies

Laia Castro, University of Zürich

Senior research and teaching associate at University of Zurich

Lilach Nir, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and in the Department of Communication and Journalism

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Published

2020-05-13

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Section

Articles