Social mobility or social change? How different groups react to identity-related news

Author(s)
Ming Manuel Boyer, Sophie Lecheler
Abstract

In times of identity politics, journalists use group primes to organize events and reduce their com-plexity. Because research has mostly investigated the effects of single group primes on opinionformation and news selection, two aspects of group primes in the news have remained understud-ied: (1) whether they directly affect group identification itself, and (2) how these effects differbetween groups. This experiment (N=750) shows that group primes in the news cause aware-ness of citizens’membership in these groups. However, citizens’perceived group importancediverges between groups: priming groups that likely have asocial change mindsetincreases theirperceived importance, while priming groups that likely have asocial mobility mindsetdoes not.Accordingly, the effects of group primes in the news depend on shared notions of a group’s statusin society and the rigidity of its boundary. Thesefindings considerably advance contemporaryunderstanding of differential news effects relating to group identification.

Organisation(s)
Department of Government, Department of Communication
Journal
European Journal of Communication
Volume
38
Pages
58-76
No. of pages
19
ISSN
0267-3231
Publication date
02-2023
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
508007 Communication science
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Communication, Language and Linguistics
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/social-mobility-or-social-change-how-different-groups-react-to-identityrelated-news(59bad130-a22d-4cce-9ee5-76a4c41dbea0).html