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Seeking Nuance in News Avoidance. Implications for individuals, journalism & society

Seeking Nuance in News Avoidance. Implications for individuals, journalism & society

PhD defence

In short
  • 11th of December 2025
  • 10:30 - 12:00 h
  • Auditorium Omnia, Building 105, Wageningen Campus
  • Livestream available

Summary

Traditionally, news plays a vital role in democratic societies: it holds the powerful accountable and informs citizens, fostering engagement and social connection. Yet, an increasing number of people are avoiding the news. This dissertation explores why people avoid news, how news avoidance manifests, and what consequences it has for information levels, mental well-being, and civic engagement. Using a mixed-methods approach—combining qualitative and quantitative research—it examines news avoidance from an audience perspective within today’s digital information society. The dissertation provides a nuanced understanding of this growing phenomenon and discusses its implications for individuals, journalism, and society. By better understanding why people distance themselves from news, we gain deeper insight into what this means for the role of news media in a digital information society.

This PhD is funded by the HU university of Applied Sciences

PhD candidate

For the PhD defence "Seeking Nuance in News Avoidance. Implications for individuals, journalism & society".

K (Kiki) de Bruin, MA

PhD candidate

About the PhD defence

Date

Thu 11 December 2025
10:30 - 12:00

Duration description

10:30 - 12:00 h

Organisational unit

Wageningen University & Research, Strategic Communication, WASS

Location

Omnia - Building 105

PhD candidate

K (Kiki) de Bruin, MA

Promoters

prof.dr. S (Sanne) Kruikemeier

Co-promoters

prof.dr. R (Rens) Vliegenthart

External promoters

Prof. Dr. Yael de Haan