This paper presents a simple formal theoretical model to explain why citizens in authoritarian regimes trust the illiberal official media more than the commercial media. Media trust is defined as changes in the citizen’s belief based on good or bad news from the media. Using this definition, the model evaluates the independent and interaction effect of media bias, censorship, media quality, the citizen’s prior belief of the situation, and the citizen’s ideology on media trust. The findings reconcile some controversies in the literature, and, more importantly, reveal new and subtle explanations the literature did not identify and probably needs to pay attention to
Declining trust in news media has often been recognized as one of the major challenges facing modern...
The question of how trust in news media relates to news media exposure patterns attracts considerabl...
People want trusted news, Faulconbirdge said. Trust has long been deemed a critical element that in...
The phenomenon of media trust has been on the agenda of researchers for a long time. Today, with the...
We are concerned in day by day life whether something we see, hear and read can be trusted. All arou...
Political communication literature reveals an ongoing scholarly interest in issues surrounding the c...
The purpose of this research is to determine whether the public has an elevated amount of trust in t...
In modern democracies, trust in government is a key indicator of political legitimacy and stability....
Several scholars investigate the link between news media and political attitudes of citizens, showin...
The news media play important roles in consolidated democracies as a source of information, watchdog...
<div><p></p><p>Despite the fact that the media serves as a vital source of information about politic...
In Comparing Media Systems (2004), Hallin and Mancini identify three models of media systems: the Me...
Despite the central role that ordinary citizens play as ‘trustors’ (i.e. the actor that places trust...
This article uses survey data on media usage and media trust in 2016 for 13 selected countries to ap...
Media is one of the most important social institutions that mediates the attitude of citizens to oth...
Declining trust in news media has often been recognized as one of the major challenges facing modern...
The question of how trust in news media relates to news media exposure patterns attracts considerabl...
People want trusted news, Faulconbirdge said. Trust has long been deemed a critical element that in...
The phenomenon of media trust has been on the agenda of researchers for a long time. Today, with the...
We are concerned in day by day life whether something we see, hear and read can be trusted. All arou...
Political communication literature reveals an ongoing scholarly interest in issues surrounding the c...
The purpose of this research is to determine whether the public has an elevated amount of trust in t...
In modern democracies, trust in government is a key indicator of political legitimacy and stability....
Several scholars investigate the link between news media and political attitudes of citizens, showin...
The news media play important roles in consolidated democracies as a source of information, watchdog...
<div><p></p><p>Despite the fact that the media serves as a vital source of information about politic...
In Comparing Media Systems (2004), Hallin and Mancini identify three models of media systems: the Me...
Despite the central role that ordinary citizens play as ‘trustors’ (i.e. the actor that places trust...
This article uses survey data on media usage and media trust in 2016 for 13 selected countries to ap...
Media is one of the most important social institutions that mediates the attitude of citizens to oth...
Declining trust in news media has often been recognized as one of the major challenges facing modern...
The question of how trust in news media relates to news media exposure patterns attracts considerabl...
People want trusted news, Faulconbirdge said. Trust has long been deemed a critical element that in...