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New Media and Political Accountability New Media and Political Accountability
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Total News Consumption and Political Accountability Total News Consumption and Political Accountability
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News Junkies as Monitors News Junkies as Monitors
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Representative News Junkies or Biased Fire Alarms? Representative News Junkies or Biased Fire Alarms?
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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61 Conditions for Political Accountability in a High-Choice Media Environment
Get accessMarkus Prior (Ph.D., Stanford University) is Associate Professor of Politics and Public Affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School and the Department of Politics at Princeton University. He received his Ph.D. from Stanford’s Department of Communication in 2004. He is the author of Post-Broadcast Democracy (Cambridge University Press, 2007), which won the 2009 Goldsmith Book Price, awarded by Harvard’s Joan Shorenstein Center, and the 2010 Doris Graber Award for the "best book on political communication in the last 10 years" given by APSA's Political Communication Section. The book examines how broadcast television, cable television, and the Internet have changed politics in the United States over the last half-century. Prior’s current research focuses on the development of political interest and the structure of citizen’s political knowledge.
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Published:02 September 2014
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Abstract
Communication technology has increased availability of public affairs information, but many citizens ignore it. How do greater availability and less widespread consumption of news affect political accountability? Not all citizens have to follow the news for media coverage to improve accountability. Under some conditions, higher levels of news exposure and political knowledge in a relatively small subset of the population could strengthen accountability, even when other citizens follow the news less than in the past. For this to work, news junkies must effectively represent the interests of those who are tuning out. If news junkies have different interests than the rest of the population, their efforts to monitor officials and raise concerns may lead to less representative government and lower accountability. As a result of more media choice, the task of holding elected officials accountable rests increasingly on a small segment of the population.
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