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Citizens' Acceptance of Data-Driven Political Campaigning: A 25-Country Cross-National Vignette Study

[journal article]

Vliegenthart, Rens
Vrielink, Jade
Dommett, Katharine
Gibson, Rachel
Bon, Esmeralda
Chu, Xiaotong
Vreese, Claes H. de
Lecheler, Sophie
Matthes, Jörg
Minihold, Sophie
Otto, Lukas P.
Stubenvoll, Marlis
Kruikemeier, Sanne

Abstract

This paper investigates how the acceptance of data-driven political campaigning depends on four different message characteristics. A vignette study was conducted in 25 countries with a total of 14,390 respondents who all evaluated multiple descriptions of political advertisements. Relying on multi-l... view more

This paper investigates how the acceptance of data-driven political campaigning depends on four different message characteristics. A vignette study was conducted in 25 countries with a total of 14,390 respondents who all evaluated multiple descriptions of political advertisements. Relying on multi-level models, we find that in particular the source and the issue of the message matters. Messages that are sent by a party the respondent likes and deal with a political issue the respondent considers important are rated more acceptable. Furthermore, targeting based on general characteristics instead of individual ones is considered more acceptable, as is a general call to participate in the upcoming elections instead of a specific call to vote for a certain party. Effects differ across regulatory contexts, with the negative impact of both individual targeting and a specific call to vote for a certain party being in countries that have higher levels of legislative regulation.... view less

Keywords
campaign; election campaign; political communication; reception; acceptance; data protection; international comparison

Classification
Impact Research, Recipient Research
Interactive, electronic Media

Free Keywords
cross-national comparison; data driven campaigns; data-driven campaigning; microtargeting; privacy; privacy regulations; vignette study; vignettes

Document language
English

Publication Year
2024

Page/Pages
p. 1101-1119

Journal
Social Science Computer Review, 42 (2024) 5

Issue topic
Comparative Digital Political Communication

ISSN
1552-8286

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.