Media Use and Misperceptions Does TV Viewing Improve our Knowledge about Immigration?
Abstract
There is considerable evidence that many people generally misperceive the size of the immigrant population in their country, and that this may have essential political implications.
In studies of political knowledge, the news media are typically said to be one important
source of information that can help make people more knowledgeable. In the present article,
we investigate whether there is a relationship between TV viewing, media system variations
and knowledge about immigration. We base our analysis on highly comparable data from
the 2002-2003 wave of the European Social Survey (ESS) and an American replication of
the ESS. The results indicate that TV viewing in general is associated with lower levels of
knowledge, while there is a positive but non-significant relationship between watching TV
news and knowledge about immigration. Differences in the levels of knowledge between the countries are fairly large, with residents of Nordic countries being most knowledgeable and
residents of the UK, US and France tending to be least knowledgeable. Aggregate explana
-tions for variations in media influence (share of public service TV and “media systems”)
do not prove to be of much value in explaining differences in knowledge about the sizes
of immigrant populations.
Publisher
Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom
Citation
Nordicom Review 31 (2010) 1, pp. 35-52
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2010-06Author
Aalberg, Toril
Strabac, Zan
Editor
Carlsson, Ulla
Keywords
Immigration
political knowledge
media exposure
public tv
media systems
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-91-86523-05-3
Series/Report no.
Nordicom Review
1/2010
Language
eng