Media Platforms and Political Learning: The Democratic Challenge of News Consumption on Computers and Mobile Devices

Authors

  • Kim Andersen University of Southern Denmark and University of Gothenburg
  • Jesper Strömbäck University of Gothenburg

Keywords:

news consumption, media platforms, political learning, political interest, panel data

Abstract

During the last decades, an important shift in media use is that people increasingly follow the news by using digital and portable media, while news consumption via traditional, offline media is decreasing. A key question is how this change influences the extent to which people seek out and learn about politics from the news media. Using a large two-wave panel survey (N = 2,828) with detailed measures of political learning and consumption of the same news outlets on different media platforms, the study shows that while political interest has a positive impact on news consumption across all platforms, people mainly learn about current political affairs from using traditional, offline platforms. In contrast, there are no general learning effects from using news media on computers and mobile devices. The study thereby demonstrates how the increasing importance of newer, digital media platforms for news consumption challenges the ideal of a broadly informed citizenry.

Author Biographies

Kim Andersen, University of Southern Denmark and University of Gothenburg

Assistant Professor at the Centre for Journalism, University of Southern Denmark, and an Affiliated Researcher at the Department of Journalism, Media and Communication, University of Gothenburg.

Jesper Strömbäck, University of Gothenburg

Professor in journalism and political communication at University of Gothenburg.

Downloads

Published

2021-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles