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Black and white photo of Hanna Bäck. Photo.

Hanna Bäck

Professor

Black and white photo of Hanna Bäck. Photo.

The Social Network : How Friends’ Online Behavior and Belongingness Needs Influence Political Activity

Author

  • Hanna Bäck
  • Emma A. Renström
  • David Sivén

Summary, in English

Are people more likely to become more politically active through social media when they observe that their friends are active? Previous research has shown that an individual's likelihood of engaging politically is influenced by observations of how friends act through social media, but relatively little is known about how such social influence through social media interacts with personality features. We argue that individuals with high belongingness needs will engage in political activity if they believe that this is expected from the social groups they belong to. To evaluate this hypothesis, a survey experiment was designed (n = 289) in Qualtrics. We had two experimental conditions (friends or extended network) in which we informed participants that the most shared or “liked” online material among their friends or extended network on Facebook was a specific petition. In a control condition, they were informed that they were shown a random petition. To increase the credibility of the manipulation, we asked participants to log into a fictive app that supposedly downloaded their Facebook data. We show that individuals are more likely to engage politically if they observe that their friends have been politically active on Facebook, but only if they have high belongingness needs.

Department/s

  • Department of Political Science

Publishing year

2021-06-01

Language

English

Pages

209-232

Publication/Series

Policy and Internet

Volume

13

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Berkeley Electronic Press

Topic

  • Human Aspects of ICT
  • Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)

Keywords

  • belongingness needs
  • experiments
  • Facebook
  • need to belong
  • political activity
  • social influence
  • social media

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1944-2866