"Fair and balanced" : What news audiences in four countries mean when they say they prefer impartial news
Mont'Alverne, Camila and Badrinathan, Sumitra and Ross Arguedas, Amy and Toff, Benjamin and Fletcher, Richard and Kleis Nielsen, Rasmus (2023) "Fair and balanced" : What news audiences in four countries mean when they say they prefer impartial news. Journalism Studies, 24 (9). pp. 1131-1148. ISSN 1461-670X (https://doi.org/10.1080/1461670X.2023.2201864)
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Abstract
Impartial news, or news without a partisan slant or overt point-of-view, is overwhelmingly preferred by news audiences worldwide, yet what such preferences mean remains poorly understood. In this study, we examine what people mean when they say they prefer impartial news. We draw on qualitative interviews and focus groups with 132 individuals in Brazil, India, the UK, and the US, conducted in early 2021. Our results show while the idea of impartial news is widely embraced in abstract, ranging from notions of reporting "just the facts" to more nuanced views about how feasible impartiality is to achieve, there is no shared understanding of impartiality in practice. People's perceptions of impartiality are rooted in two intertwined folk theories: the notion that news production and editorial decisions are guided largely by (a) partisan political agendas or (b) commercial considerations, determining what stories were chosen, ignored, or crafted in order to deceive and manipulate. There is some country variation around the importance of these folk theories, but their recurrence suggests that demonstrating impartiality to audiences requires convincing them not only that news content is balanced but also that editorial decisions were not driven by ulterior motives.
ORCID iDs
Mont'Alverne, Camila ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6100-4879, Badrinathan, Sumitra, Ross Arguedas, Amy, Toff, Benjamin, Fletcher, Richard and Kleis Nielsen, Rasmus;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 88420 Dates: DateEvent25 April 2023Published7 April 2023AcceptedSubjects: Political Science > Political theory Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > Journalism, Media and Communication Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 12 Mar 2024 15:16 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 14:14 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/88420