<b>Media Use and Political Engagement: Cross-Cultural Approaches| Media Use and Political Engagement: Cross-Cultural Approaches—Introduction<b>

Authors

  • Özen Odağ Touro College Berlin
  • Frank M. Schneider University of Mannheim
  • Larisa Buhin Touro College Berlin
  • Jinhee Kim Pohang University of Science and Technology

Keywords:

media use, online information, entertainment, cross-cultural comparison, political engagement, emerging media

Abstract

Democracies around the world are struggling with the decline of civic and political engagement. At the same time, new forms of engagement such as lifestyle politics, Internet activism, and political consumerism are on the rise. In this introduction to the Special Section, we argue that citizens are increasingly engaging through informal, creative, and digitally networked activities, thereby moving political engagement into the domain of entertainment and personalized communication on the Internet and in social media. Moreover, we advocate a cross-cultural approach to explore how media use contributes to political participation in a globalized, mediatized world. The studies assembled in this Special Section show that political engagement through using media hinges on cultural parameters such as political structures, political leaders, press freedom, neo-tribes, degrees of tightness, postmaterialist values, norms, and localized versus centralized patterns of information disorder, to mention a few. Implications of the studies and suggestions for future research direction are discussed.

Author Biographies

Özen Odağ, Touro College Berlin

Professor, Psychology, Touro College Berlin 2020 

Frank M. Schneider, University of Mannheim

Postdoctoral Research Associate Media and Communication Studies

Larisa Buhin, Touro College Berlin

Professor of Psychology

Jinhee Kim, Pohang University of Science and Technology

Professor of Communication

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Published

2023-02-13

Issue

Section

Special Sections