How politics shape views towards fact-checking: Evidence from 6 European countries
How politics shape views towards fact-checking: Evidence from 6 European countries
Fact-checking has spread internationally, in part to confront the rise of digital disinformation campaigns. American studies suggests ideological asymmetry in attitudes toward fact-checking, as well as greater acceptance of the practice among those more interested in and knowledgeable about politics. We examine attitudes toward fact-checking across six European counties to put these findings in a broader context (N = 6,067). We find greater familiarity with and acceptance of fact-checking in Northern Europe (Sweden and Germany) than elsewhere (Italy, Spain, France, and Poland). We further find two dimensions of political antipathy: a left–right dimension and an “anti-elite” dimension (including dissatisfaction with democracy and negative feelings toward the European Union), the latter of which more consistently predicts negative feelings toward fact-checkers in the countries examined. Our findings demonstrate that despite general acceptance of the movement, significant political divides remain. Those less likely to trust fact-checkers could be more vulnerable to disinformation targeting these divides, leading to a spiral of cynicism.
469-492
Lyons, Benjamin
562d35bb-6be0-4e08-8663-0cc28bfa0063
Merola, Vittorio
3a0f1d8e-ee5d-4b08-a959-8a4fbf318acf
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Stoeckel, Florian
ca82e601-5b0f-4f51-9b2d-46a1693e1f25
8 July 2020
Lyons, Benjamin
562d35bb-6be0-4e08-8663-0cc28bfa0063
Merola, Vittorio
3a0f1d8e-ee5d-4b08-a959-8a4fbf318acf
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Stoeckel, Florian
ca82e601-5b0f-4f51-9b2d-46a1693e1f25
Lyons, Benjamin, Merola, Vittorio, Reifler, Jason and Stoeckel, Florian
(2020)
How politics shape views towards fact-checking: Evidence from 6 European countries.
International Journal of Press/Politics, 25 (3), .
(doi:10.1177/1940161220921732).
Abstract
Fact-checking has spread internationally, in part to confront the rise of digital disinformation campaigns. American studies suggests ideological asymmetry in attitudes toward fact-checking, as well as greater acceptance of the practice among those more interested in and knowledgeable about politics. We examine attitudes toward fact-checking across six European counties to put these findings in a broader context (N = 6,067). We find greater familiarity with and acceptance of fact-checking in Northern Europe (Sweden and Germany) than elsewhere (Italy, Spain, France, and Poland). We further find two dimensions of political antipathy: a left–right dimension and an “anti-elite” dimension (including dissatisfaction with democracy and negative feelings toward the European Union), the latter of which more consistently predicts negative feelings toward fact-checkers in the countries examined. Our findings demonstrate that despite general acceptance of the movement, significant political divides remain. Those less likely to trust fact-checkers could be more vulnerable to disinformation targeting these divides, leading to a spiral of cynicism.
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Published date: 8 July 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 500651
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500651
PURE UUID: 54a0de0a-0f0b-49af-970f-77e8d0ff258b
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Date deposited: 07 May 2025 17:01
Last modified: 24 Jun 2025 02:15
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Author:
Benjamin Lyons
Author:
Vittorio Merola
Author:
Jason Reifler
Author:
Florian Stoeckel
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