Authors
Ekaterina Zhuravskaya, Maria Petrova, Ruben Enikolopov
Publication date
2020/8/2
Source
Annual Review of Economics
Volume
12
Pages
415-438
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Description
How do the Internet and social media affect political outcomes? We review empirical evidence from the recent political economy literature, focusing primarily on work that considers traits that distinguish the Internet and social media from traditional off-line media, such as low barriers to entry and reliance on user-generated content. We discuss the main results about the effects of the Internet in general, and social media in particular, on voting, street protests, attitudes toward government, political polarization, xenophobia, and politicians’ behavior. We also review evidence on the role of social media in the dissemination of fake news, and we summarize results about the strategies employed by autocratic regimes to censor the Internet and to use social media for surveillance and propaganda. We conclude by highlighting open questions about how the Internet and social media shape politics in democracies and …
Total citations
20192020202120222023202484983164217151
Scholar articles
E Zhuravskaya, M Petrova, R Enikolopov - Annual review of economics, 2020
E Zhuravskaya, M Petrova, R Enikolopov - Annual Review of Economics