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Good News and Bad News: The Differential Effects of Media Consumption on National and State-Level Political Trust

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Abstract:

We investigate the ways that media consumption habits drive assessments of trust in national- and state-level governments.

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govern (207), state (206), polit (139), trust (136), news (132), media (115), nation (114), coverag (64), public (61), consumpt (54), 1 (50), negat (49), effect (48), level (47), knowledg (45), respond (39), less (30), 0 (30), affect (29), find (27), like (26),
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Name: MPSA Annual National Conference
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http://www.indiana.edu/~mpsa/


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MLA Citation:

Ulbig, Stacy. and Dunaway, Johanna. "Good News and Bad News: The Differential Effects of Media Consumption on National and State-Level Political Trust" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the MPSA Annual National Conference, Palmer House Hotel, Hilton, Chicago, IL, Apr 03, 2008 <Not Available>. 2008-10-08 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p266652_index.html>

APA Citation:

Ulbig, S. G. and Dunaway, J. , 2008-04-03 "Good News and Bad News: The Differential Effects of Media Consumption on National and State-Level Political Trust" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the MPSA Annual National Conference, Palmer House Hotel, Hilton, Chicago, IL Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2008-10-08 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p266652_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: We investigate the ways that media consumption habits drive assessments of trust in national- and state-level governments.

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Associated Document Available MPSA Annual National Conference
Associated Document Available Political Research Online

Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 28
Word count: 9568
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GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS: The Differential Effects of Media Consumption on National and State-level Political Trust Stacy G. Ulbig and Johanna Dunaway Department of Political Science Sam Houston State University SHSU Box 2149 Huntsville TX 77340 936-294-1468; 936-294-4721 ulbig@shsu.edu; jdunaway@shsu.edu Abstract Research has long established that the public tends to view national political officials in lower regard than sub-national political officials such as state legislatures and local governments. Even more research focuses on the myriad ways that media
0.286 Notes: Cell entries are probit regression coefficients (B) and robust standard errors (SE). See Appendix A for question wording and variable coding. **p<0.01; *p<0.05 (two-tailed) 25 Figure 1 News Coverage of State and National Government Figure 2 News Coverage of Congress and State General Assemblies Figure 3 News Coverage of The President and State Governors 26 Figure 4 Trust in State Government by Political Knowledge and News Consumption Figure 5 Trust in National Government by Political Knowledge and


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