ABSTRACT

Dorothée Hefner, Hanover University of Music, Drama and Media, Eike Mark Rinke and Frank M. Schneider, University of Mannheim

Today’s POPC environment constitutes a high-choice, high-stimulation media ecology in which political information can be accessed easily, inexpensively, and constantly by almost every citizen. However, it also requires greater motivation from citizens to keep up and engage deeply with public affairs in view of a widening range of content options available to them. This chapter describes how the POPC environment, in tandem with citizens’ personal characteristics, alters the way they are exposed to and process political information. We map the contours of the contemporary “POPC citizen” and point out how the media ecology characterizing the fourth age of political communication impinges on normatively important civic competencies and democracy at large.