
Annika Fredén
Associate Senior Lecturer

A social safety net? Rejection sensitivity and political opinion sharing among young people in social media
Author
Summary, in English
One reason why people avoid using social media to express their opinions is to avert social sanctions as proposed by the spiral of silence theory. We here elaborate on individual-level sensitivity to social rejection in relation to voicing political opinions on social media sites. Given the uncertainty about sharing political views in social media, and the fact that social acceptance, or rejection, can be easily communicated through, for instance, likes, or a lack of likes, we argue that rejection sensitive individuals are less likely to share political information in social media. Combining an analysis of unique survey data on psychological characteristics and online political activity with focus group interviews with Swedish youth supports our argument, showing that rejection sensitive individuals are less inclined to engage politically in social media. The results extend on previous research by establishing the role of rejection sensitivity in political engagement in social media.
Department/s
- Department of Strategic Communication
- Department of Political Science
Publishing year
2019-02-01
Language
English
Publication/Series
New Media & Society
Volume
21
Issue
2
Full text
- Available as PDF - 370 kB
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Document type
Journal article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Topic
- Political Science
- Communication Studies
- Psychology
Keywords
- social media
- political participation
- political opinion
- political psychology
- rejection sensitivity
Status
Published
Project
- Political participation among young people – from party democrats to social media activists?
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1461-4448