2012
DOI: 10.1177/1940161212442956
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Political Information Opportunities in Europe

Abstract: This study examines the supply of political information programming across thirteen European broadcast systems over three decades. The cross-national and cross-temporal design traces the composition and development of political information environments with regard to the amount and placement of news and current affairs programs on the largest public and private television channels. It finds that the televisual information environments of Israel and Norway offer the most advantageous opportunity structure for i… Show more

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Cited by 131 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…The political information supply on the two largest public service television channels, SVT1 and SVT2, is almost exactly average compared to other Western media systems. Moreover, similar to comparable countries such as Belgium, Great Britain, Israel, The Netherlands, and Norway, news scheduling on Swedish public and commercial television is clearly diversified, increasing the chances to capture inadvertent Downloaded by [University of California Santa Barbara] at 02:06 26 August 2015 audiences (see Esser et al, 2012; see also Oscarsson & Holmberg, 2008). In addition to the two widely watched public service channels, the Swedish broadcasting system also provides viewers access to several commercial channels with different content profiles (Hujanen, Weibull, & Harrie, 2013;Strömbäck & Nord, 2008).…”
Section: Data and Casementioning
confidence: 94%
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“…The political information supply on the two largest public service television channels, SVT1 and SVT2, is almost exactly average compared to other Western media systems. Moreover, similar to comparable countries such as Belgium, Great Britain, Israel, The Netherlands, and Norway, news scheduling on Swedish public and commercial television is clearly diversified, increasing the chances to capture inadvertent Downloaded by [University of California Santa Barbara] at 02:06 26 August 2015 audiences (see Esser et al, 2012; see also Oscarsson & Holmberg, 2008). In addition to the two widely watched public service channels, the Swedish broadcasting system also provides viewers access to several commercial channels with different content profiles (Hujanen, Weibull, & Harrie, 2013;Strömbäck & Nord, 2008).…”
Section: Data and Casementioning
confidence: 94%
“…The argument put forward in several cross-national comparative studies is that public service-oriented broadcasting systems provide more opportunities for less politically motivated citizens to acquire political knowledge than market-based systems (Aalberg, van Aelst, & Curran, 2010;Curran et al, 2009;Iyengar et al, 2010;Soroka et al, 2012). By offering a content profile with more news about politics and current affairs at several slots during primetime, citizens in public service systems are more likely to encounter political information as a by-product of watching television (Esser et al, 2012). Thus, "for citizens in these countries, the opportunity costs of exposure to hard news reports are significantly lowered" (Iyengar et al, 2010, p. 305).…”
Section: Learning From Public Service Televisionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Thus, the authors conclude, the concentration of firms caused by the fixed costs spent on quality, combined with the public's relatively undifferentiated tastes, weakens the provision of external diversity by the market. For example comparative studies on the political information supply provided by television broadcasters conclude that increased market competition leads to less news and current affairs programming, in other words less quality programming overall (Esser, et al, 2012).…”
Section: Indirect-editorial Influencesmentioning
confidence: 99%