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Why do some citizens perceive public broadcasting news as biased? As a PhD Candidate, you aim to answer this question by combining insights from media research and communication science as well as political science. This way, your research helps us understand how public media can better fulfil their role to create a shared public sphere that is essential to democracy.
The Empirical Political Science Chair group at the Nijmegen School of Management invites applications for a PhD position on the research project: Biased media or biased citizens? Perceived and actual bias in public service media. The project investigates why some citizens perceive public broadcasting news as biased. Well-functioning public media are essential for democracy because they create a shared public sphere. Public media have a dual task of providing citizens with both factual news and a balanced representation of different viewpoints on topical issues. This task provides a crucial counterbalance in a media environment that increasingly enables citizens to select information in line with their political views and remain in their own information 'bubbles'. Indeed, public broadcasting news reaches citizens from widely varying social and political backgrounds. Yet, current debates about fake news, 'alternative facts' and left-wing bias threaten to undermine this role of public media. The Netherlands is no exception as evidenced by heated debates about the bias of public news broadcaster NOS.
This project therefore aims to answer the question why some citizens perceive public broadcasting news as biased. Such perceptions can arise for two reasons. First, public newscasts are actually biased and this is noticed by citizens. Second, public newscasts are framed as biased, and this framing resonates with citizens. To comprehensively analyse both mechanisms, we use content analyses of NOS news programmes (Study 1) and bias accusations in traditional and social media (Study 2); and survey experiments to test which citizens perceive more public media bias, and why (Study 3 & 4). Combining insights from media research and communication science as well as political science will allow us to address these questions.
The research project is carried out in collaboration with the Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR), the leading research institute of communication science in the Netherlands. Your task will be to collect data, conduct research, predominantly through applying qualitative and quantitative research procedures, to write scientific articles, and to complete a PhD thesis in time. You will also participate in conferences, workshops and other scholarly and valorisation activities, and contribute to teaching at the Nijmegen School of Management. The position is for 4 years and involves mainly PhD research, and about 5% teaching.
In this position you will be training to become an academic researcher while working on your own PhD project under the supervision of Political Science staff. You will be supervised by Prof. Carolien van Ham and Dr Erika van Elsas (RU) and Prof. Claes de Vreese and Dr Katjana Gattermann (ASCoR/UvA). You will be part of a team at the Department of Political Science and enroll in the PhD programme at the Institute for Management Research (IMR).
Fixed-term contract: 4 years.
The Nijmegen School of Management (NSM) is an academic centre of research and higher education at Radboud University, focusing on institutional and managerial issues concerning complex organisations in both the public and private domains. It covers seven disciplines: Business Administration, Public Administration, Political Science, Economics and Business Economics, Social and Political Sciences of the Environment, Human Geography, and Spatial Planning. NSM strives for a multidisciplinary approach whenever relevant.
Political Science currently comprises five chairs: Empirical Political Science, Political Theory, International Relations, Contesting Europeanisation, and Conflict Studies. Together these chairs offer Bachelor’s degree programmes in political science and conflict studies and seven Master's tracks, each leading to a Master's degree in political science. The educational programme is characterised by small-scale teaching and provides a stimulating learning environment with an emphasis on the development of academic skills. Research activities fall under the responsibility of the interdisciplinary Institute for Management Research (IMR). Under the motto 'Creating knowledge for society', IMR focuses on academic research into the development, design and effectiveness of the public and private structures that regulate, govern or manage human interactions. Research in political science focuses on issues of legitimacy and institutional change and is organised around two themes: Conflict at the Crossroads of the Global and the National and Sustainable Democracy.
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