Emerging Media, Instability And Democracy: Examining The Granger-Causal Relationships Of 122 Countries From 1946 To 2014

Authors

  • Blake Wertz Boston University: College of Communication
  • Jacob Groshek Boston University: College of Communication

Keywords:

Granger-causality, Democratization, Mobile, Media Systems Dependency Theory

Abstract

This study attempted to extend findings in Groshek (2011), which used cross-national time-series data in sequences of Granger causality tests to examine the democratizing effects of newspaper, radio and television diffusion, by replicating the methodology while examining new media instead. Media Systems Dependency Theory (MSD) suggested that in countries with high media diffusion or high sociopolitical instability, new media diffusion would Granger cause democracy. However, no such relationships were observed when studying new media technology. These findings were interpreted to mean that new media does not have the democratizing ability that MSD Theory ascribes to traditional media diffusion.

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Published

2017-10-31

How to Cite

Wertz, B., & Groshek, J. (2017). Emerging Media, Instability And Democracy: Examining The Granger-Causal Relationships Of 122 Countries From 1946 To 2014. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research. Retrieved from https://spir.aoir.org/ojs/index.php/spir/article/view/10206

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Section

Papers W