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Putting out Fire with Gasoline: Testing the Gamson Hypothesis on Media Reliance and Political Activity
Authors:Thomas J Johnson  Barbara K Kaye
Institution:1. School of Journalism at the University of Texas , Austin;2. School of Journalism &3. Electronic Media at University of Tennessee , Knoxville
Abstract:This study extends the Gamson Hypothesis, which asserts that trust and self-efficacy affect political activity, by examining how reliance on mainstream and alternative sources of political information interact with trust, self-efficacy, and political activity. Overall, this study supports the Gamson Hypothesis: Dissidents (those high in self-efficacy and low in political trust) are more likely to protest the government than Assureds (high levels of trust and efficacy), who are more likely to engage in more conventional political activities. Dissidents avoid online newspapers and broadcast news sites and instead turn to more polarizing sources, such as radio talk shows and political blogs. On the other hand, Assureds rely on mainstream sources such as broadcast television online and avoid more partisan sources such as political Web sites and talk radio.
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