Filter
4
Topics
Trust in the Media, Credibility of Media
2
News Consumption & Information Sources of Media Users
1
Digital & Information Literacy
1
Artificial Intelligence
1
Journalism
1
News
1
Democracy / Democratization and Media
1
Language
Countries / Regions
Authors & Publishers
Media focus
Publication Years
Methods applied
Journals
Output Type
“Fair and Balanced”: What News Audiences in Four Countries Mean When They Say They Prefer Impartial News
Journalism Studies, volume 24, issue 9 (2023), pp. 1131-1148
"Impartial news, or news without a partisan slant or overt point-ofview, is overwhelmingly preferred by news audiences worldwide, yet what such preferences mean remains poorly understood. In this study, we examine what people mean when they say they prefer impartial news. We draw on qualitative inte
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Overcoming Indifference: What Attitudes Towards News Tell Us About Building Trust
Oxford: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (2021), 69 pp.
"This report contains a range of findings about news audiences in each of the four countries [Brazil, India, United Kingdom, United States], focusing on audiences overall as well as different segments of the public categorised according to their degree of trust towards news brands in their country.
...
What We Think We Know and What We Want to Know: Perspectives on Trust in News in a Changing World
Oxford: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (2020), 26 pp.
"Trust in news has eroded worldwide. According to the Reuters Institute’s Digital News Report 2020, fewer than four in ten people (38%) across 40 markets say they typically trust most news. While trust has fallen by double digit margins in recent years in many places, including Brazil and the Unit
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