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One Country, Two Audiences: Television and the Internet in Russia

One Country, Two Audiences: Television and the Internet in Russia. Prof Sarah Oates School of Social and Political Sciences University of Glasgow (UK) www.media-politics.com. Analyzing the internet in Russia. Center for New Media and Society at the New Economic School ( РЭШ)

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One Country, Two Audiences: Television and the Internet in Russia

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  1. One Country, Two Audiences: Television and the Internet in Russia

    Prof Sarah Oates School of Social and Political Sciences University of Glasgow (UK) www.media-politics.com
  2. Analyzing the internet in Russia Center for New Media and Society at the New Economic School (РЭШ) http://www.newmediacenter.ru/ Higher School of Economics, Moscow Higher School of Economics, St Petersburg Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University University of Glasgow (UK)
  3. First Channel … Going, going, gone?
  4. Online Audience in Russia: Data Detailed report on the Russian internet produced by the Russian government ИНТЕРНЕТ В РОССИИ: СОСТОЯНИЕ, ТЕНДЕНЦИИ И ПЕРСПЕКТИВЫ РАЗВИТИЯ, 2011 Федеральное агентство по печати и массовым коммуникациям http://www.fapmc.ru/magnoliaPublic/rospechat/activities/reports/2011/item6.html 2010 survey of 2,017 Russian citizens
  5. 2010 survey on regular media use
  6. Media transformations in Russia Revolution or evolution? Role of catalyst How can we separate the different elements of the media in order to focus on it – without losing sight of the overall pattern? News production, content and audience
  7. The challenge of studying the internet Pace of change Relatively little empirical research Very little comparative research across country boundaries To what extent can the results of research grounded in a specific national context be generalised? Internet – is it a cause or an effect? How do you formulate research questions and hypotheses? Can you really separate the commercial from the political, and the private/personal from the public in the online world?
  8. Top 10 Media Preferences for Russians aged 12-54
  9. Top 10 Media Preferences for Russians aged 12-34
  10. Top 10 Media Preferences for Russians aged 12-17
  11. Online Audience in Russia Is there evidence for a link between heavy internet use and political values? Is the internet audience changing qualitatively as it increases quantitatively?
  12. Findings Evidence that internet use is linked to more skepticism and less support for the Russian regime. Emergence of an ‘internet generation’ in Russia: high levels of internet penetration among Russian youth + internet use is spreading fast and wide among Russians under the age of 40. Attitudes appear to change with internet use – even when other socio-economic variables are weighed in the balance
  13. Questions Can the rapid growth in internet signal a significant challenge to the current Russian regime? Are there particular features of an online audience, including size, attitude, behavior, or pace of growth, that could predict its contribution to democratization?
  14. From 2000 to 2010, the number of Russians on line grew by almost 2,000%, reaching 59.7 million users or 43% of the population by March 2011. http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats4.htm#europe
  15. What fuels growth in online audience? Rise in income for Russians in the past decade with falling cost of access Spread of internet usage from urban elites to a much wider base Government policy that has encouraged the use of ICTs Lack of repressive state controls on Russian internet Attractive range of Russian internet platforms and websites for users that play to a strong cultural interest in reflective discussion Development of mobile internet augmented by the extremely widespread use of mobile telephones in Russia Well-educated and attentive media audience.
  16. Recent growth in online audience From winter 2009-10 to winter of 2010-11, growth in internet penetration in Russian villages (syela) exploded, increasing from 19% to 28% for a 48% growth rate over a single year. There was in growth in Russian internet use everywhere – from 22% in towns from 100,000 to 500,000 residents to more modest 4% in the relatively saturated Moscow internet market.
  17. Online generation gap While 84% of those aged 12-17 use the internet, only 8% of those over the age of 55 are on line. Following current trends, the communications agency report predicts that virtually all Russians from the age of 12 to 45 will be on line by the autumn of 2014. The report The report predicts internet usage saturation rates of 99% for 12 to 17-year-olds and 97% for those between 18 and 45. Meanwhile, while usage will reach 76% for those between age 45 and 54, the report predicts that the oldest segment of society will only reach 24% internet saturation by late 2014.
  18. The rule of TV -- 2004 62% said they received news about politics every day from television (28% from radio and just 14% from newspapers) 75% watched Channel 1’s Vremya nightly news regularly, 62% watched Vestiregularly, and 38% watched Sevodnyaregularly.
  19. The evidence would suggest that the media, particularly state television, have quite a strong influence: 40% of the respondents in the 2004 survey claimed that national state television was the most important source of information for their vote choice in the Duma elections. Also, Russians often report they make their mind up during campaigns
  20. How do Russians find news online (Russian agency report) 38% of traffic to online media sites comes as a user goes directly to a particular URL Another 17.5% comes from search. Thus, while search is the most popular activity on the Russian internet, it is clear that people are only searching for news a fraction of the time. Other traffic to online media sites comes through news aggregators (9%), other media websites (9%), web portals such as Mail.Ru (8%), traffic aggregation sites (6.5%); and banner ads (5%) Russian agency report
  21. The Internet, news and the Russian audience Major news websites serve more as tunnels into narrow selections of news from single producers rather than opportunities to garner more news from a range of sources. If it appears that Russians are fairly narrow in their consumption of news, it can be argued that they are relatively broad in their discussion of the news in the online sphere.
  22. Regular internet users in Russia Think it’s easier to join organizations Freedom of speech easier Easier to participate in public life Have greater respect for human rights Trust commercial enterprises MORE, the government, parliament and state TV LESS No effect on trust in commercial TV Source: 2010 survey (bivariate correlations)
  23. Who supports Medvedev? Those who watch Vremya Women NOT those who are online Source: 2010 survey, regression analysis
  24. Russian television does not have a parallel dominance in the online sphere and the younger audience shows more interest in online rather than traditional media could signal a fundamental shift in the loyalty and attention of key segments of the Russian news audience.
  25. First Channel … Going, going, gone?
  26. Funding The Internet and Everyday Rights in Russia, Economic and Social Research Council (UK), Grant RES000224159 International Potential, National Limits: Investigating the Role of the Russian Internet in Constraining the Social Agenda, British Academy Research Grant 2010 survey data from: Economic and Social Research Council Grant R000223133 Building a New Democracy?: Television, Citizens and Voting in Russia
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