Andrés Scherman
Diego Portales University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Andrés Scherman.
Politics | 2015
Andrés Scherman; Arturo Arriagada; Sebastián Valenzuela
In 2011, Chile experienced two massive protest movements – one against the cost and quality of public education and another against the construction of power plants in Patagonia. This represented a unique opportunity to analyse and compare how Facebook and Twitter use were related to street demonstrations. Using a probabilistic face-to-face survey among urban youth (18–29 years old) conducted shortly after the protests, this study revealed a positive relationship between the use of social media and participation in both social movements, even controlling for other relevant variables (e.g. political interest, ideology and trust). The theoretical and methodological implications of these findings are discussed in this article.
Online Information Review | 2016
Sebastián Valenzuela; Nicolás M. Somma; Andrés Scherman; Arturo Arriagada
The purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between social media use and protest participation in Latin America. It advances two questions. First, does social media increase the chances of protest participation at the individual level, as prior research shows for advanced democracies? Second, in a region with glaring economic and political inequalities, does social media deepen or reduce the gaps in protest participation that exist among men and women, the young and the old, different social classes, or people with varying levels of political engagement?,The paper uses cross-sectional Latin American Public Opinion Project survey data from 2012 representing the adult population of 17 Latin American countries. It presents binary logistic regression models with protest participation as the dependent variable, social media use for political purposes as the main independent variable, control variables, and interactions.,Using social media for political purposes significantly increases protest chances – it is the second strongest predictor. Additionally, social media reduces protest gaps associated with individuals’ age, gender, psychological engagement with politics, and recruitment networks.,First, the paper shows that the contribution of social media to collective protest travels beyond advanced democracies – it also holds for more unequal regions with weaker democratic trajectories like Latin America. Second, it shows that social media may mitigate participatory inequalities not only, as shown by past research, regarding institutional participation (e.g. voting), but also regarding contentious tactics.
Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism | 2018
Claudia Mellado; María Luisa Humanes; Andrés Scherman; Auska Ovando
Previous research has largely explored the differences and similarities between print and digital media in terms of news cycles and specific content characteristics. However, fewer studies have add...
Journal of Communication | 2012
Sebastián Valenzuela; Arturo Arriagada; Andrés Scherman
International Journal of Communication | 2014
Sebastián Valenzuela; Arturo Arriagada; Andrés Scherman
Journal of Communication | 2016
Teresa Correa; Andrés Scherman; Arturo Arriagada
Cuadernos.info | 2015
Arturo Arriagada; Teresa Correa; Andrés Scherman; Josefina Abarzúa
Comunicación y sociedad = Communication & Society | 2012
Andrés Scherman; Arturo Arriagada
International Journal of Public Opinion Research | 2018
Nicolle Etchegaray; Andrés Scherman; Sebastián Valenzuela
International Journal of Communication | 2017
Claudia Mellado; Andrés Scherman