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Articles

Implications of urbanism for the use of local news media: effects of population concentration on types of news acquisition in Japan

Pages 1556-1571 | Received 19 Nov 2014, Accepted 04 Jan 2016, Published online: 02 Feb 2016
 

ABSTRACT

The Internet, a global computer network enabling people to send and receive information anywhere in the world, also functions as a local medium of communication. This study focuses on the role of the Internet in transmitting local news and examines the effects of community population concentrations as socio-ecological environments on the use of local news media consumed online and offline. Data from 1367 respondents across 156 Japanese communities were used to analyze the relationships between type of community and type of news source. The findings suggest that people who live in highly populated communities tend more often to use the Internet to access local news, whereas those in less populated communities tend to use more traditional mass media. However, the results of this study did not show a relationship between population concentrations within communities and the acquisition of international news, nor did the social features of residents adequately explain the effects of population concentration on the acquisition of local news. These results are consistent with theoretical predictions based on network externalities, urbanism, and collective action. The findings indicate that local news consumption is embedded in local social contexts in a way that international news is not, reinforcing the importance of urbanism in the information age.

Acknowledgements

The survey for this work was carried out in Professor Hashimoto's research group at the Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies at the University of Tokyo, as well as Dentsu Innovation Institute.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributors

Satoshi Kitamura is an Associate Professor of Communication Studies at Tokyo Keizai University in Japan. [email: [email protected]]

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI [grant number 26285118], and from Tokyo Keizai University (15-13).

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