Gender Differences and Perception of Disinformation in News Consumption Among Migrant Communities in Chile

Diferencias de género y percepción de desinformación en el consumo informativo de comunidades migrantes en Chile

Diferenças de gênero e percepção de desinformação no consumo de informação de comunidades migrantes no Chile

Sibrian Díaz, Nairbis - Villafañe Núñez, Jesús
Detalles Bibliográficos
2024
news consumption
disinformation
gender
migration
Chile
consumo informativo
desinformación
género
migración
Chile
consumo de informação
desinformação
gênero
migração
Chile
Español
Universidad Católica del Uruguay
LIBERI
https://revistas.ucu.edu.uy/index.php/revistadixit/article/view/4098
https://hdl.handle.net/10895/4722
Acceso abierto
Resumen:
Sumario:Research has shown that news coverage plays a crucial role in migration experience, with access to information —or disinformation— creating knowledge gaps that affect migrants' inclusion. Information consumption patterns also vary, and these differences may become more pronounced when intersected with migrant status. This study asks: What gender differences exist in news consumption and the perception of disinformation among migrant communities in Chile? The aim is to analyze gender-based differences in news consumption and perceptions of disinformation among migrants. A mixed-method approach is used, with 1,020 surveys and 10 in-depth interviews conducted. The findings reveal that women tend to prefer social media for news, while men favor digital media outlets. Women's main motivation for staying informed is to help others, whereas men are driven by a desire to stay up-to-date. Disinformation about migration is widespread, with migrant women reporting higher levels of impact.