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Session Submission Type: Created Panel
In recent years, rising populism and politically-motivated attacks on the media have led to growing distrust in the media as an institution of democracy, which has contributed to democratic backsliding. This panel examines the drivers of growing distrust and interest in the media and news.
A Qualitative Analysis of the Mechanisms Underlying the “Trust Nexus” - Amy Ross Arguedas, University of Oxford; Sayan Banerjee, Texas Tech University; Camila Mont'Alverne, University of Strathclyde; Benjamin Toff, University of Minnesota; Richard Fletcher, University of Oxford; Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, University of Oxford
Polarization and the Dynamics of Media Trust in a Revitalizing Democracy - Ashley Blum, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Adam J. Berinsky; David Rand, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Gabriela Czarnek
Trust in the News in Rural America - Dominik Andrzej Stecula, The Ohio State University; Kristin Kay Lunz Trujillo, University of South Carolina
Evaluating Differences in Trust toward Audio- versus Text-Based Modes of News - Benjamin Toff, University of Minnesota; Nick Mathews, University of Minnesota
Changing Levels of Interest in News and Politics in the Last Decade - Richard Fletcher, University of Oxford; Waqas Ejaz, University of Oxford; Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, University of Oxford