2018
DOI: 10.1177/1940161218787046
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Populism and the Gender Gap: Comparing Digital Engagement with Populist and Non-populist Facebook Pages in France, Italy, and Spain

Abstract: This paper clarifies whether and to what extent populist communication could drive different gender-oriented reactions. We adopted an original research design intending Facebook as a natural environment where investigating the interaction between social media users and populist and non-populist parties. Our case selection considers three countries falling into the pluralist polarized media system: France, Italy, and Spain. A human content analysis was carried out on a sample of 2,235 Facebook posts published d… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“…From demographics point of view, our results replicate previous research that shows males [ 54 , 55 ], those less educated, and right-wing or right leaning individuals support populist parties more [ 56 ]. In terms of individual and country level processes, our findings also suggest that support for populist and thin ideology parties is driven by a fundamental intergroup mechanism, i.e., social identity and status concerns, which in turn are influenced by country level processes, i.e., opportunities available for human development (HDI) and corruption perceptions (CPI).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…From demographics point of view, our results replicate previous research that shows males [ 54 , 55 ], those less educated, and right-wing or right leaning individuals support populist parties more [ 56 ]. In terms of individual and country level processes, our findings also suggest that support for populist and thin ideology parties is driven by a fundamental intergroup mechanism, i.e., social identity and status concerns, which in turn are influenced by country level processes, i.e., opportunities available for human development (HDI) and corruption perceptions (CPI).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…In the first article, Zulianello et al (2018) analyze communication strategies of political leaders on Facebook with evidence from multiple continents. In the second article, Bobba et al (2018) focus on the potential gender gap by comparing user engagement with populist and nonpopulist Facebook pages in three countries. In the third article, Wettstein et al (2018) analyze more than nine thousand news stories from ten countries, identifying distinct roles the media can assume in their coverage of populist actors.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirical research shows that populist success is increased by the development of social media and the populist actors' skills to effectively use the new communication platforms (Rožukalne, 2017;Bobba et al, 2018, Postill, 2018. Social media are a fertile ground (Engesser et al, 2017) for populist communication that helps populist politicians to bypass the use of professional media during election campaigns.…”
Section: Populism and Social Media Communicationmentioning
confidence: 99%