Browsing and believing: divergent effects of internet use on government trust in Central Asia


Dzutsati V. Rakhmatullayeva D.
2025Routledge

Central Asian Survey
2025#44Issue 3393 - 414 pp.

How does the use of the internet by citizens affect their trust in government and political participation? Previous research has yielded conflicting results. We hypothesize that in authoritarian contexts the passive use of the internet will be associated with lower trust in the government and lower political participation while the active use of the internet will be associated with higher trust in the government and higher political participation. Individuals, who receive the news through the internet, will tend to be sceptical about their governments because they will be exposed to alternative sources of information not controlled by the authoritarian government. The more extensively individuals use the internet for creating content, the more positively they will view the government owing to the effects of the self-selection process of acting under government censorship. Using 11 waves of survey data from four Central Asian countries we test our theoretical conjectures and find support for them.

autocratic politics , Democratization , digitalization , political participation , political trust

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School of Anthropology, Political Science, and Sociology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, United States
Higher School of Business and Economics, Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, Almaty, Kazakhstan

School of Anthropology
Higher School of Business and Economics

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