Affiliation:
1. Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
2. Northwestern University, USA
3. The University of Tokyo, Japan
4. Universidad de San Andrés, Argentina
5. University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Abstract
Research on trust has come to the forefront of communication studies. Beyond the dominant focus on informational trust and its country-specific articulations, trustworthiness evaluations can relate to the materiality of news and its global manifestations. Especially in digital algorithmic environments, understanding news trustworthiness requires a holistic approach, which combines informational and socio-technical aspects while addressing both institutional and interpersonal trust. Drawing on 488 in-depth interviews with media consumers in Argentina, Finland, Israel, Japan, and the United States, this article investigates news (dis)trust from the lens of socio-materiality. The six trust-oriented affordances we identified—selectivity, interactivity, customization, searchability, information abundance, and immediacy—reveal important socio-technical commonalities that underlie news trust across countries. These affordances, moreover, point to an interplay of trust and self-agency. Taken together, the findings illuminate the lived experience of news trust as manifested across cultures and offer a broader understanding of trustworthiness within current media ecology.
Funder
the Helsingin Sanomat Foundation
Global Partnership Fund of the Buffett Institute for Global Studies at Northwestern University
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Communication
Cited by
10 articles.
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