Knowledge and the News: An Investigation of the Relation Between News Use, News Avoidance, and the Presence of (Mis)beliefs

Author:

Damstra Alyt1ORCID,Vliegenthart Rens1,Boomgaarden Hajo2,Glüer Kathrin3,Lindgren Elina4ORCID,Strömbäck Jesper4,Tsfati Yariv5

Affiliation:

1. Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Communication, University of Vienna,Vienna, Austria

3. Department of Philosophy, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

4. Department of Journalism, Media and Communication, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden

5. Department of Communication, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel

Abstract

While increasing scholarly attention has been devoted to news avoidance, there are only few studies taking the distinction between intentional and unintentional news avoidance into consideration, and none that has investigated the linkage between the two types of news avoidance and knowledge about politics and society. To fill this void, this study explores this relationship while distinguishing between knowledge related to uncontested issues and knowledge related to issues that have been subject to public controversies (climate change, vaccination, genetically modified organisms, crime, and immigration). Relying on a large-scale survey among Swedish citizens conducted in 2020 ( N = 2,160), we find that the relationship with patterns of news use is substantially different across these types of beliefs. Among other things, the results suggest that knowledge of uncontested issue domains is positively related to news use, but knowledge of contested issue domains is not. The intentional avoidance of news is only negatively related to knowledge of contested issues. Taken together, the results suggest that the mechanisms driving beliefs related to uncontested versus contested issues are substantially different.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Communication

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