birds of a feather: investigating the policy-issue
TRANSCRIPT
Political Science Program
Department of Social Sciences
University of the Philippines, Manila
BIRDS OF A FEATHER:
INVESTIGATING THE POLICY-ISSUE FORMATION OF FACEBOOK POLITICAL
ECHO CHAMBERS
Thesis
By
Kyle Dheric D.C. Miguel
2014-53037
BA Political Science
Professor Jose Mari Lanuza
Adviser
May 2019
Manila, Philippines
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ABSTRACT
This research aims to answer the question: “How do echo chambers work to create policy
attitudes?” In this process, the study takes from the Issue Publics Hypothesis and Anticipated
Agreement theory in assuming that political interests play a vital role in the phenomenon of echo
chambers. The study suggests that echo chambers share similar characteristics with semi-public
microspheres, arguing that discourses within echo chambers display evidences of issue-
deliberation and policy-formation strategies embedded in them. Considering policy-issues as
manifestations of political interest and values, this study adopts the Issue-Selling Model as a
frame for analyzing the patterns of policy attitude formation of echo chambers in a bottom-up
fashion. The results conclude that issue-selling strategies are present within echo chambers but
their orientation is not targeted towards an in-group deliberation and the claim that echo
chambers being principally homogenous in terms of political stances still proves to be true.
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Table of Contents
1. Title Page
2. Approval Sheet ………………………………………………………………………….1
3. Abstract……………………………………………………………………………...…..2
4. Table of Contents …………………………………………………………………….....3
5. Acknowledgement……………………………………………………………………....4
6. Chapter 1 introduction……………………………………………………………….….7
A. Background of the study ……………………………………………………..…7
B. Research Question ………………………………………………………….….12
C. Analytic Framework ………………………………………………………...…13
7. Chapter 2: Review of related literature…………………………………………………23
8. Chapter 3: Methodology………………………………………………………….….…37
9. Chapter 4: Data Presentation and Analysis………………………………………….….47
10. Chapter 5: Conclusion and Recommendations ………………………………….……..55
11. References ……………………………………………………………………….…….58
12. Appendix ………………………………………………………………………………68
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study is dedicated to all the ordinary Filipino people, whose voices are usually
neglected by the government and whose ability to participate in politics and to effect change is
constricted by the limited resources and opportunities that they have. This study was conducted
on the prospects of democratizing the Philippine political system by focusing on the
effectiveness of the deliberative spaces accessible to the ordinary people who are usually
politically disempowered in our society. By doing this research, I aim to understand the nuances
and mechanisms of the echo chambers present in social media on the hopes of contributing to the
efforts of demystifying and solving them.
In the journey of conducting this research, I faced various challenges and learned
valuable lessons on the topic of echo chambers and the process of scientific thinking and writing.
For all the learning and experience, I send my sincere gratitude to Professor Jose Mari Lanuza,
who fulfilled a very important role of a supportive and hands-on thesis adviser. Thank you for all
the time and effort you invested on teaching and guiding us throughout the research process
inside and outside the classroom even at the expense of your own time, energy, and convenience.
Thank you for all the patience and moral support that you gave to all your thesis advisee and
thank you for being a very memorable part of our college life as well as our journey into a career
of research and academe.
Thank you for not giving up on us and for trying your hardest to understand what we
wish for our researches to be. Thank you for trusting our ability to provide our own perspective
on our research and thank you for granting us the freedom to interpret our researches based on
the ways we understand them and we are comfortable with. I personally wish I did more in order
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to give justice to all the sacrifices you made for the good of our thesis. As your thesis advisee, I
will make sure that all your efforts will be worth it by making you proud on my future academic
endeavours.
I would also like to send my gratitude and appreciation to Professor Cleve Kevin
Arguelles who opened the doors of research for me by providing the fundamentals of the
research process in our PS 199.1 (Qualitative Methods) Class. Thank you for providing us the
basic understanding of how to conduct a proper research by teaching us the purpose and
relevance of every part of a research paper. Thank you for guiding us in the process of starting
our thesis by helping us choose research topics of great social and political relevance.
I personally thank you for serving as my mentor inside and outside the confines of the
classroom and for granting me research opportunities from which I was able to explore and
discover my interest and love for research. Because of you, I was able to develop my passion in
learning the various available qualitative research methods available out there and discover how
interesting it is to learn various theories and data interpretation techniques. Above anything else,
I would like to thank you for serving as my personal inspiration, for your convictions and
dedication in upholding the values of freedom, justice and democracy, for serving as my role
model for academic integrity, and for becoming my personal research idol.
I would like to thank Mr. Sammuel Cabbuag and Mr. Rossine Fallorina, the research
panel for our thesis defense, for their valuable insights and expert comments both on my topic
and on my research writing style. Their opinions helped drive my research to its better version.
Thank you for developing a better and more responsible researcher in me through your help.
I would like to thank my family, especially my mother, Cecilia Dela Cruz, for providing
the emotional and financial support needed for the conduct of the research process. Thank you
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for the patience and understanding for all the times I spent outside writing my paper and the
expenses that the process incurred. Thank for giving me the hope and willpower to fight until the
end.
I would like to thank all my friends who remained to be very supportive in all ways
possible throughout the journey of writing my research. I would like to thank Sherminaylah
Paiso for always staying by my side, giving me the moral and emotional support especially
during the hard times. Thank you for always understanding me especially when times get tough.
Thank you for giving me your honest opinions and insights regarding my research as all these
valuable comments helped push my research to what it is now. Above anything else, thank you
for sharing this struggle with me and thank you for making everything a lot more bearable. I
would also like to thank my other friends like Paolo Jose for giving the critical questions and
opinions that truly tested the validity and effectiveness of the claims, assumptions, questions and
methods I utilized in my research. To all my family, friends, professors, and research subjects,
you are part of this success. Thank you.
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CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
One evening, while waiting for a bus on my way home, I noticed the enthusiastic
scrolling of a person on their phone nodding in agreement while reading Facebook posts. I took a
peek and saw the massive amount of posts from various “pro-Duterte” groups and pages of that
person. Scenarios like this naturally sparks an academic’s curiosity, and so I asked, “Are they
conscious that they are in an echo chamber? That they are seeing only one side of an issue?” “Do
they always agree with and support the president’s and their group’s take on every
policy/political issues?” But putting my biases aside, I also doubted my assumptions, “Is
exposure in echo chambers limited to only one side of an issue? Are there instances when they
do not share similar sentiments?” “Are they passive consumers of information or do they create
and share their own take on issues? Do they challenge ideas different to theirs?” Wanting to
know how echo chambers really work, this caught my interest to write and pursue this research.
Background of the Study
In the Philippines, Facebook news articles that remark on the successes or shortcomings
of President Rodrigo Duterte and his policies get their comments section flocked by messages
expressing support or disagreement ranging from petty personal attacks to well-
researched/reasoned opinions (INQUIRER.net, 2016; Rappler, 2017; INQUIRER.net, 2018).
This is a manifestation of how social media turned into a Habermasian Public Sphere, or simply
public sphere. A public sphere is a common space for political deliberation – a marketplace of
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ideas where “information is exchanged, preferences are negotiated, and solutions are
deliberated” (Habermas, Lennox, & Lennox, 1974; Gromping, 2014). Social media played the
role of a public sphere, contributing to the formation of political will by providing a
communicative environment conducive for the debates and exchange of ideas (Dahlgren, 2005;
Halpern & Gibbs, 2013).
However, the opinion of political science scholars on the democratizing capabilities of
social media is divided. On the other side of the debate, scholars argue that in many instances
social media platforms enable users to limit their exposure to only political information that they
already support or tend to agree with through selective exposure and echo chambers as aided by
functions such as liking, following, posting, sharing, and making and joining groups. (Gilbert,
Bergstrom & Karahalios, 2009; Garrett, Carnahan, & Lynch, 2013; Colleoni, Rozza &
Arvidsson, 2014).
Selective exposure is defined as the tendency for individuals to subscribe to and seek
information that reinforce their preconceived bias on certain ideas (political issues for example)
and avoid opposing opinions or information that may otherwise disprove their own. Echo
chambers on the other hand refers to the condition where individuals limit their own interaction
to people with the same beliefs and ideas as theirs. Homophily is an umbrella term defined as the
tendency for individuals to limit their interaction exclusively to people they agree or expect to
agree with on key ideas they believe as true by banding together and filtering their exposure to
information in that process. (Iyengar, Hahn, Krosnick, & Walker, 2008; Gilbert, Bergstrom et al.,
2009; Colleoni et al., 2014) Homophily captures the essence of both echo chambers and selective
exposure, and thus will be used in this study to collectively refer to both concepts for
convenience.
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Why is the existence of homophily in and as aided by social media a concerning political
issue? Even if the benefits of being a public sphere and the harms of accommodating homophily
were proven to coexist, among these two conceptually antagonistic characteristics, the latter is
considered detrimental to the former, which can reverse the assumed political benefits from
social media altogether. The contradiction draws from the heavy reliance of deliberation’s
merits, like exchange of ideas and negotiation of solutions, on the ability of participants to
effectively communicate their opinion or viewpoint to their opposition and reflect on their own
values (Gromping, 2014; Colleoni et al., 2014). Homophily hampers effective and regular
communication due to limits on exposure and obstacles to reflection of values from the
reinforcement of beliefs.
Attention on social media’s tolerance of homophily therefore proves to be significant
because of its implications on the way politics is conducted through public deliberation. New
knowledge born out of research on the subject can help diagnose and resolve the negative
externalities of social media usage on deliberation. This dilemma inspired a trend of studies on
homophily.
Studies on social media echo chambers took different dimensions and approaches on the
issue. A great bulk of the literature confirms the existence of echo chambers using various
quantitative techniques such as collections of attitudes and preferences, measurements that
survey tendency and exposure, and statistical computations that project political biases (Garrett,
2009; Flaxman, Goel, & Rao, 2016; Quattrociocchi, Scala, & Sunstein, 2016). Some analyzed
the effects of echo chambers on the worsening polarization and fragmentation of political
discourse (Wojcieszak & Mutz, 2009; Prior, 2013; Dubois & Blank, 2018). Others studied
various phenomena strongly correlated to echo chambers like personality traits and political
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ideology (Bessi, 2016; Boutyline & Willer, 2017). While a few went an extra mile and tried to
propose solutions using methods promoting conscious impartiality (Baumgaertner, 2014).
Upon evaluation of the available literature on social media political echo chambers, there
is an observable scarcity of researches that takes a qualitative viewpoint of the subject (Gilbert et
al., 2009; Bozdag, 2013; Garrett et al., 2013; Colleoni et al., 2014; Bakshy, Messing & Adamic,
2015). This implies an abundance of unexplored areas for observation, analysis and reporting.
An example that this study will try to bring to the surface is the question of how social media
political echo chambers work by observing the dynamics of forming/shaping policy issue
attitudes, nuancing the nature of such interactions to the way people in echo chambers exploit
and subject themselves to such mechanisms.
It bridges the gap left in the literature by treating opinion manifested as policy issue
attitudes (Guinaudeau, & Persico, 2014) in echo chambers as valid attempts to participate in
deliberative politics, serving a purpose by embodying political values and interests shaped by
interacting with people presumed to support similar political priorities, voicing out such
discourses of values in the form of policy framing and suggestions.
Using quantitative research techniques like the surveys used in the literature subject the
data collection to the first-person bias of the echo chambers members’ limited perception of the
phenomenon. For instance, the sensitivity of political information shared by/asked from subjects
in a survey form such as affiliations/partisanship and news consumption might be self-
incriminating, making subjects unwilling to share or otherwise fabricate or misreport answers
which risks strong data contamination. Using qualitative techniques such as digital ethnography
aided by discourse analysis, the phenomenon can be observed, described and reported in a subtle,
less direct fashion without the reliance on the skewed perspective of the subjects.
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Another observation on the literature is the dominance of previous studies focusing on
the individual as the unit of analysis, trying to dissect their experiences and perceptions of an
echo chamber. This creates an issue wherein the researchers cannot see the whole picture of the
echo chamber, only relying on a fragmented image formed from bits and pieces of information
the subjects can limitedly observe or experience. Aside from the data, it also affects the way echo
chambers are viewed.
In this study, echo chambers will be observed as a system of discourses, events, and
interactions, with individuals playing a vital role, but not the only focus of observation.
Individuals will not be treated as singular objects that acts as sites and recipients of echo
chambers to whom biased information revolve around, but rather as parts of a bigger system of
echo chamber where many people participate – a system that can exist even outside the confines
of one person’s presence, perception and imagination. Discourses and information will be
observed not on the perspective of how a member makes sense of them, but as they form and
evolve from an individual to a collective (echo chamber).
This research will take a shift from the dominant psychological approach on echo
chambers to the political (Anticipated Agreement and Issue Publics Hypothesis), which will be
further explained in the framework (Iyengar et al., 2008). In this study, the political lens adds to
the original psychological take by looking at the political dimension (political values and policy
issues) of the interactions that happen inside echo chambers, to which members participate in
the conduct of politics (as deliberative mini-publics) (Iyengar et al., 2008; Curato & Boker
2016). This abandons the paradigm that dismisses echo chambers as mere acts of avoiding
cognitive dissonance, devoid of motivations and interest (Iyengar et al., 2008).
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Considering echo chambers to be politically-oriented suggests possible approaches on
understanding and resolving the intention of their members. This approach gives credence on the
diversity of interests and interactions manifested in an echo chamber which is left out or simply
monolithically and homogeneously observed in the cognitive dissonance approach. It reveals
new opportunities on the study of dynamics and power structures within, and the formation and
development of values in social media political echo chambers. It contributes to the scholarship
of echo chamber research by leaving the assumption that narratives in echo chambers are simply
biased opinions and rather treating such discourses as valid message-carriers of political values
and interest that dynamically evolve and re-form through the efforts of their members.
In summary, the research takes a fresh approach on the study of social media political
echo chambers by tackling the previously underexplored question of how echo chambers work,
introducing a political approach that focuses on the interactions and discourses within echo
chambers, employing qualitative techniques such as digital ethnography and discourse analysis
to unpack how political values/opinions (as embodied in policy-issue attitudes) form and evolve
inside echo chambers.
Research Question
This study aims to answer the question: “How do echo chambers work to create policy
issue attitudes?” Specifically, this study wants to know how social media groups functioning as
echo chambers form, re-form, or affect attitudes, views, and biases on salient issues and/or
policies. This question seeks to unpack how individuals in echo chambers manage to articulate
and forward their political values and interests, in the form of policy issue attitudes, affecting
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other members of their echo chamber in that process. The study aims to answer the question by
observing the interactions between members of echo chambers, analysing the dominant strategies
manifested by members to help shape and contribute to the discourse of policy issue attitudes
that the echo chamber champions.
Analytical Framework
Semi-Public Microspheres
This study considers online social media groups as semi-public microspheres, which are
defined as spaces of interaction where opinions are discussed and exchanged regularly regarding
issues of collective interest and particular salience for the group (Winocur, 2003). Since this
concept is a subset of the Habermasian public sphere, it follows that these groups also exhibit
traits which are characteristic of a public sphere.
Specifically, these traits are manifested in social media groups through the following: 1)
the availability of spaces that allow members to freely participate in political (micro)deliberation,
2) a means of effective communication readily available to the members anytime without
discrimination for geographic location or socioeconomic status and 3) resources/mechanisms that
allows members to convene to make a call for political action, to make a public demand, or to aid
each other in gathering/generating information necessary for political participation (Habermas et
al., 1974; Winocur, 2003; Dahlgren, 2005; Colleoni et al., 2014). These traits allow the online
groups – functioning as microspheres – to provide arenas of deliberation and meaning-making,
which in turn socializes individual views and perceptions on salient social issues.
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In the Philippines, the problem of usage, trafficking and proliferation of illegal drugs is a
salient issue due to its politicized nature in the current political climate. The urgency and
relevance of the issue draws from its adverse effects on individuals and communities as
specifically tied to issues of criminality and individual security (Johnson & Fernquest, 2018).
This is the narrative that Duterte capitalized on from his electoral campaign up to the current
period of his leadership from which his administration engaged on an all-out war on drugs
(Barrera, 2017). Revolving around the policy of war on drugs are discourses of human rights and
due process that criticizes the unjust and inhumane extrajudicial killings involved in its
implementation, and on the other end are discourses of criminality that garners support for the
continuation of it (Barrera, 2017; Johnson & Fernquest, 2018).
Thus, deliberation for public support or opposition is vital for political actors. This
immense need to foster public support via deliberation allows microspheres such as online
groups to be arenas of political contest. However, some online groups lose the traits that enable
deliberation and debate; instead polarized content dominates the discourse, which eventually
creates an echo chamber that isolates individuals from the general conversation with different
views and ideas, and instead bombards them with polarized content usually framed with
inflammatory and emotive speech.
Following this phenomenon, this study will look at Facebook groups of both populations
that support and oppose Duterte as echo chambers that manifests signs of being semi-public
microspheres which allows its members to contribute to the discourse of the policy issue known
as the war on drugs, through the formation and re-formation of narratives that strengthen the case
in support or in opposition of the said policy issue. This study follows the logic of how policy
issue attitudes/positions in these groups remain to be products of deliberation as microspheres
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despite displaying homophilous characteristics (being an echo chamber). This can open
opportunities for possible efforts to bridge the gap and engage echo chambers to be more
deliberative.
Pro- and anti-Duterte Facebook echo chambers will be observed to show how the
characteristics of a semi-public microsphere are strategically utilized as resources to help
contribute in the process of shaping each groups’ attitude on the policy issue of war on drugs as
nuanced to the groups’ collective interests. If manifestations of efforts to further a larger
collective interest can be observed to be present on the discourses of the policy issue (war on
drugs), this model will be able to illustrate how membership in an echo-chamber equates to a
notion of potential benefit to individuals by forwarding members’ interests through the
promotion of policies that the individuals and groups deem to be individually and collectively
beneficial.
This is an important emerging claim in the study of echo chambers as it may reveal that
individuals possibly join echo chambers not only as a result of cognitive dissonance but also
because of their internal motivations to effectively pursue their political interests with the help of
these echo chambers. This directly proves to be in correspondence with the claims of Issue
Publics Hypothesis and Anticipated Agreement Theory. This leads to the next section of the
discussion which also works as the primary assumption for the research question.
Issue Publics Hypothesis and Anticipated Agreement Theory
The Issue Publics Hypothesis claims that the rise of internet and social media allowed
users to create content themselves without restrictions on quantity or quality. Information
production became democratized since anyone with internet access can now produce information
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on various topics which broke traditional media monopoly on information and narrative
telling/framing. This paved way for alternative media sources’ perspectives to be “sold” in the
“market of ideas” which also generated the inevitable problem of information overload. (Iyengar,
et al, 2008)
The abundance of information makes it difficult for users to focus their attention to the
unlimited amount of issues since they do not have enough resources in terms of time and energy
to read/engage on every issue or news information they encounter on Facebook, for example.
This leads users to focus only to particular policy issues of personal importance to them. The
users then become members of that issue’s “issue public” - the population that support or oppose
certain issues of personal interest. Membership in itself allows the issue public to attach personal
importance towards a policy attitude which is observable from their motivations to express their
own position towards an issue, acquire information to better their opinion on the said issue or
even seek agreement from others to confirm the correctness of their take on the issue. (Iyengar,
et al, 2008)
On the other end, the Anticipated Agreement Theory answers the question of what
rationale or decision-making qualifications should be used in order to choose which information
source to subscribe to or which content to digest and engage with given the abundance of
available political information and the scarcity of time and energy. (Iyengar, et al, 2008)
According to the Anticipated Agreement Theory, users favour sources whom they expect
to agree with by exposing themselves to candidates/parties with a similar take or stand to them
on an issue. Doing so creates a reinforcing effect towards their beliefs and attitudes as it creates a
feeling or it sends a message of confirmation of the soundness or correctness of their take on the
issue while at the same time allowing them the convenience of avoiding a clash of values against
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individuals that has a different take on the issues and values they initially deem personally
important. In this sense, subscription to the candidate or party of similar values and attitudes
towards issues becomes a rational decision rather than just an attempt to avoid cognitive
dissonance, as it creates an expectation that the candidates will pursue actions and policies that
would further the interests they advocate for in similarity with the priorities of the issue public
that supports them. (Iyengar, et al, 2008)
In summary, the Issue Publics Hypothesis (IPH) and Anticipated Agreement Theory
(AAT) claims that the information overload that social media created contributes to the
development of echo chambers in response to the phenomenon, both as a means to filter
information and as a strategy to forward the political interests of individuals. The assumption of
the study that draws from the themes of IPH-AAT is that political interests (consciously or
subconsciously) plays a vital role in the calculus of joining an echo chamber. From this logic, the
research then aims to discover how these political interests, manifested as narratives utilized in
policy issue attitude deliberations, are forwarded in these echo chambers.
Policy Issues
One integral level of difference between the literature and this study originates from this
study’s attempt to operationalize abstract concepts like “issues”, “values”, and “interests”. The
qualitative nature of the study calls for the operationalization of such concepts using easily-
observable indicators. The operationalization of variables through observable indicators is
necessary to conveniently observe and track how abstractions like interests and values transfer
from one person to another and changes through time by looking at their counterparts that
manifests in reality: discourses. It avoids the ambiguity of certain focuses of analysis like
interests or values and it helps the analysis by labelling discourses and locating them in the
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theoretical plane so as to integrate them with, and confirm their validity through the theories and
models.
The concept of “policy issues” as used in this study can be simply characterized as
questions of public policy as defined and specified by political actors themselves in order to
propose how policies ought to be. These issues require public policies – certain
positions/attitudes to be taken that will possibly lead to the resolution of those issues once crafted
and implemented. Several positions/attitudes revolve around a policy issue and different actors
can take different positions/attitudes on a policy issue depending on how it will affect their
interests. Policy-issue preferences can simply be defined as addressing an issue (out of many
other issue), giving it more priority and providing reasons for the salience or urgency to prioritize
the issue. Policy-issue attitudes or policy-attitudes on the other hand can be defined as a take or
perspective on a policy-issue that suggests a certain position or course of action based on the
values attached by the person defining it. (Guinaudeau & Persico, 2014)
Using this concept, this study gives image to issues by looking at them as policy-issues –
events or problems that needs to be discussed and acted upon. Framing a policy-issue (taking a
policy position) in this sense can serve as an observable manifestation of values based on the
interests that motivates an individual to take that position. These abstractions are to be derived
from actual discourses on policies (from conversations and exchanges) as observed and
generated from the echo chambers.
In this study, the proliferation of drugs will serve as the policy-issue of great salience for
the groups (Barrera, 2017). Manifestations of a policy-issue preference therefore is any statement
that suggests why drugs is the most pressing issue of the Philippines right now, whereas an
example of policy attitude can be a comment or post advocating for or against the war on drugs
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as the most effective solution to the drug problem. By simplifying “issues” into policy-issues, the
data can now be limited to the discourses (operationalized as statements, justifications,
arguments or opinions suggesting shared experiences, issue-framing, and/or policy-action
suggestions) revolving around a policy-issue rather than observing all the various possible
manifestations of any vague concept.
Given these definitions, political opinions dominating echo chambers (embodied as
policy attitudes) are considered to be products of members presenting, engaging and deliberating
on the values and interests that they attach in support of a policy (which is viewed as a function
of echo chambers assuming the role of a semi-public microspheres). In order to answer the
research question, this study will focus on the narratives and policy positions (encapsulating
political values and interests) as members use them in shaping, forming or contributing to the
echo chambers’ policy attitudes. This study will observe how such narratives are organized and
delivered as strategies utilized in echo chambers in order to affect or shape its policy attitude.
The analysis will be primarily patterned after the Issue-Selling Model.
Issue-Selling Model
The Issue-Selling Model is an organizational device that originated from the field of
business organizational theory rather than the field of political science. It suggests a bottom-up
in-group series of strategies used for organizational issue-formation and conceptualization
process for policy action/suggestion. In this study, Issue-Selling Model suggests how echo-
chambers work as a political issue-based organization. The model explains how individual
members balance out their personal involvement or benefit with the interests of the group (or
other members of the group), hence increasing the chances of negotiating the group into
complicity towards the pursuit of favourable policies to the individuals employing the
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strateghies. Initially, issue-selling is not a model that is exclusive to political groups or to the
study of politics. It is a general model used more commonly on business-organizational models
from which individuals try to sell an issue that they strategize to be appealing to the interest of
the group (in that case, the business organization). (Dutton et al, 2001)
Issue-Selling Model proposes three main strategies of selling an issue within an
organizational setup. The first strategy is packaging which is defined as the way an issue or idea
is presented. It can be operationalized through the use of instruments such as narratives or
through issue bundling (connecting an issue to values that have currency or importance within
the group). The second strategy is involvement which is defined by the actors involved within an
issue and the nature of their involvement. It grants individuals the ability to define or highlight a
population that is or should be interested in an issue. Furthermore, it allows individuals to decide
the nature of involvement of a population either as a beneficiary or a responsible actor. The last
strategy involves process moves which can be defined as technicalities that can be used to
strengthen a claim or advocacy for an issue. It is operationalized through preparation (the level of
research done before presenting a case), timing (persistence and opportunism), and the formality
of presenting the issue. (Dutton et al, 2001)
Since Issue-Selling Model is not an actual political organizational model, the researcher
decided to derive concepts from the discipline of politics in order to nuance the model with the
case of social media echo chambers. In this case, the first two strategies can be parallelized with
agenda setting strategies. Agenda can be defined as points of political interests from which
public policies are based and revolves around. Agendas are defined by “objects” or more
commonly referred to as issues from which people present their opinion about, based on their
lived experiences, needs, wants, and understanding. Packaging strategies is similar to the concept
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of transfer of salience under the agenda setting model. According to transfer of salience, issues
are shaped by discourses (which are observable using the attributes that people attach to issues
and utilized in order to frame and affect the understanding of an issue). Discourses can therefore
be used in order to transfer to other people a way of understanding – what issues to think about
and how (in what perspective) to think about them. (McCombs, 2005)
Hence, under this study, packaging strategies are operationalized through the discourses
that people use in order to share to fellow members of the organization which issues should be
thought about or prioritized and in what framing or perspective (or attitudes) should they be
understood and discussed.
The second method of agenda setting that corresponds with involvement is knowledge
activation from which policy issues are framed based on other people’s pre-existing cognitive
schema (shared experiences, political values and attitudes) which grants an individual a claim of
importance of an issue for the group (or other members of the group). Such strategy strongly
affects the decision making of individuals as well as the collective. This strategy can be
operationalized using measures of confirmation and agreement of other members of the group
through comments. (McCombs, 2005)
In conclusion of this section, the Issue-Selling Model will be used to answer the research
question by providing an analytical instrument that suggests a pattern of strategies that supports
the claim that policy attitude formation in echo chambers follows a deliberative process
involving a negotiation of political interests and values. It also suggests that members of an echo
chamber can play and assume active roles in shaping the values and belief system of an echo
chamber while forwarding their personal interests and issue preferences (individually and
collectively).
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Overall, the theories assume that the information overload in social media contributed to
the development of echo chambers aimed at both playing the role of a selection/filtering
mechanism and a strategy of forwarding an individual’s political interests (IPH-AAT). The
theories imply that these political interests can manifest as narratives which are used in echo
chambers to deliberate (fulfilling the function of a microsphere) policy attitudes. The theories
suggest that policy attitude-formation in echo chamber follows a bottom-up Issue-Selling
Model/Strategy from which individual interests are negotiated with that of the collective to
generate support for policies assumed to benefit both the individual and the group.
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CHAPTER II:
REVIEW OF LITERATURE
The literature for this study is divided into three key aspects. The first category of
literature provides a brief narrative on the capacitating ability of social media to increase political
activities and awareness. The first part gives focus on the wider topic of political participation.
This section also discusses some criticisms in relation to the mentioned topic such as problems
on accountability, effectivity and quality of online participation, and the main topic of this paper,
which is homophily. In this category, various theoretical explanations on the rising political
activity on social media were provided by looking at the aspects of increased individual social
capital, and the other aspect of expanding public sphere through alternative environments. These
two key aspects plays an important role as they serve to be the foundations of these study in a
sense that these characterizations paved the way for changing the political landscape of the
Philippines through the use of social media.
The second part of the literature will deal with the existence of homophily and its
conceptual and operative definitions across the literature. This part of the literature will deal with
the studies made on echo chambers in general as well as those specifically framed on the context
of social media (selective exposure and filter bubbles). Related issues will also be discussed like
the controversial issue of filter bubbles generated by the algorithms that various social media
networks employ. This part of the literature will provide a brief background of what was already
known on the topic of homophily and polarization while providing details on the theories and
methods used on the study of the said topic. The last part of the literature will deal with the
deliberative functions of social media and provide a sufficient understanding on the significance
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of the study of homophily and polarization on the context of public sphere, decision making, and
compromise.
Social Media as a Social Institution
The rise of social media provided a platform to criticize the currently existing media (Gil
de Zuniga et al., 2009). It breaks the power balance between the mainstream media companies
that manipulate discourse and narratives, and the people who serves as the recipients of such
narratives. Social media is considered as an empowering political tool as it prevents
discrimination over race, gender, or ethnicity through equal opportunity of access (Park, 2011).
Surprisingly, even the poor can access the social media. Because of these reasons, the
significance of social media on the everyday life of the people began to rise. More than that,
social media also started to become an alternative dimension for politics to occur. As a form of
media, social media showed promising characteristics that are different from the traditional
media making it more suitable for political engagement and participation. (Effing et al., 2011,
Gil de Ziuniga et al., 2009; Vissers & Stolle, 2014)
Social media, in comparison with the other types of media, encourages a greater sense of
participation and interaction from the readers. It grants users the capability to share their views,
post their comments, and justify their opinions in this media. Unlike the print and mass media
that end with the distribution of information, social media stimulates a greater sense of scrutiny
and a higher level of analysis from the people for they are allowed to discuss about the issues
raised in the society with other individuals. (Park, 2011)
Mass media and print media, distributes information acting as a tool for raising awareness
and building public opinion. However, while all media could fulfill the said role, there is still a
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disparity in terms of perceived credibility across the various type of media. Print media is
perceived by readers as more legitimate and influential compared to mass media as editorial
comments and professional analyses make it more appealing and perceived as credible (Kiousis,
2009). The same distributive capacity that the two media have is not exclusive to them since the
information generated in social media allows a global level of readership, something that is
difficult for the traditional media unless they have the capital and credibility to do so.
On the question of credibility however, one criticism rises from the claim that user-
generated contents are highly prone to abuse and spam (Park, 2011). It makes the legitimacy of
information found in such media uncertain. Users of social media are more focused on content
creation than consumption (Agichtein et al., 2008). However this criticism is also being
countered by some. According to another research, since social media creates an interconnected
network of people, it can help people on creating a social capital that is enough for them to
possess a credible information and hence check the credibility and legitimacy of the information
that they get on their own through cross-referencing with other sources (DiMaggio et al., 2001).
Also, high probability of user-to-user interactions can contribute to the identification of high-
quality contents (Agichtein et al., 2008). Which means that interactions with fellow users allow
criticism that corrects wrong or misleading information.
As a conclusion, it can be argued that the same benefits of raising awareness and
contributing to the formation of public opinion could exist in social media while disregarding the
accusations of questionable credibility, hence giving it an advantage since media narratives will
no longer be dominated by news media oligarchs and opinion leader monopolies. This is in
addition to the pragmatic benefits of social media on the resolution of actual sociopolitical issues
alone. An example that can be cited is the vital role it plays in raising awareness in times of
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calamity, just like when an earthquake occurred in Haiti (Yates & Paquette, 2011). Social capital
be generated from social media which raises awareness on these issues. This process, in return,
helps on gathering more support from all over the world (DiMaggio et al., 2001). Spreading
news and sympathy is therefore easier through the use of social media because connections are
more diverse and are not limited by physical distance.
Social Media and Politics
There are many studies that prove how social media can directly affect policy outcomes
and people-to-institution relationships. It was proven that social media can also contribute in
promoting the transparency of government actions. Since openness in social media can provide
people information necessary to fight corruption and help people evaluate the government’s
performance (Bertot, Jaeger & Grimes, 2010). Social media also played a huge role in shaping
political outcomes and creating history. During the Arab Spring for example, social media
proved its capability to mobilize social movements. Social media also paved the way for the
resolution of other social and political issues such as the Delhi Gang Rape case and the Ethnic
Conflict in Assam. It also helped in providing alternative political spaces for political expression
and protest during the Gezi Park Movement in Turkey (Bute, 2014; Demirhan 2014). These
instances proved how powerful social media can be in the field of politics and its potential for
solving other problems in political science.
In line with its rising relevance in politics is a huge body of knowledge that discusses
social media and political participation (Astrom, et al., 2012). Majority of the literature available
on the relationship of social media and politics is dedicated on this topic primarily because social
media creates an alternative avenue for political participation (whether it is an effective
participation or not is still debated by scholars) that changes the power dynamics between the
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public, the society and governments. This event has implications when discussing (1) measures
for calling out the attention of government institutions as an accountability mechanism and (2)
by creating public pressure when forwarding public and marginalized interests through agenda
setting.
This relationship between social media use and increased political participation can be
explained with the use of two prominent theories that dominates this line of study. These two
theories focus on the capacitating abilities of social media in terms of creating and generating
social capital and networks. These theories also explain the possibility of the existence of this
study. The Civic Voluntarism model of Verba, et al. (1995) for instance explains that resources
(time, money, and skill), engagement (interest, knowledge, and efficacy), and recruitment serves
as explanatory elements of increased political participation. According to Teorell et al., these
capacitating and motivational factors are present in social media and largely influence an
individual’s political action. (Gustafsson, 2012)
It was also argued that social media positively affects political learning as a function of
participation. Despite low attention levels, social media still contribute to the process of learning
political information. People retain some of the political information that they receive online
through short-term recall. This can later on affect their decision making once that they try to
participate in actual politics. Therefore, social media really increase the resources and political
knowledge of the people in support to the theory mentioned above. (Bode, 2008)
On the other hand, Putnam argues that social media increases political participation as it
open up opportunity for connecting with other people and participation in various groups and
organizations. This participation and creation of networks makes an individual more likely to
participate in politics. Putnam explained social capital as features of social life like networks and
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trust, which allows individuals to pursue shared interests together. Generation of social capital is
hence attributable to involvement in groups and communities. The same factors like group
membership and resource generation were used as definition of social capital for this instance.
(Conroy, Feezell & Guerrero, 2012)
These informal or “parapolitical domains” create a sense of community and an illusion of
a single cultural unit from which individuals submit to certain levels of relatability. Social
networks was further explained by Bode by saying that as social interactions produce
conversations, it also creates a transfer of political information which in turn affects political
preferences and stimulates an individual’s tendency to participate. Bode also delineated social
network from its original conception that is limited by environment and said that it is also the
nteractions which social networks can refer to. (Bode, 2008)
While these models prove the extents from which social media serves as a whole new
space from which politics could exist, it also explains how that separate space could directly
affect political outcomes, activities and decisions in the real world. This is where this study takes
its grounding as well as its foundations. The sense of community that the social media creates
through the construction of social capital does not only provide a simple space for
communication or information dissemination but it also provides a space for political discourse
to exist as well.
There are competing points of view when it comes to the possibility of political discourse
in social media. Some claim that even if social media can provide a deliberative space that may
increase political participation, limited interaction and credibility issues might prevent intensive
exchange from happening (Halpern & Gibbs, 2013). However, counter narratives exist, claiming
that people tend to engage on political discussions and debate online more while they
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continuously seek and acquire political information online (Gil de Zuniga et al., 2009). However,
an even stronger narrative one again attacked this idea by explaining the people’s tendency to
consume and prefer news that agrees with their pre-existing point of view. It means that while
social media promote greater access to communication, it also discourages debate and discourse
between competing ideas. (Baumgartner & Morris, 2010) This last claim leads the researcher to
pursue the said line of argumentation.
Throughout this study social media will be treated as platform for political discourse.
Studies on homophily argues that social media serves as a “Habermasian public sphere” that
leads to decisions that affect actual offline political participation such as voting for a political
candidate (Robertson, Vatrapu & Medina, 2010). This assumption will be further discussed on
the succeeding sections.
For the first section, it can be concluded by saying that the increased capabilities changed
the political landscape of the society by creating new alternatives for participation, providing
previously unavailable political information, and maintaining a social network and accessible
means for communication. While this posits that social media use should have made the people
supposedly more engaged, it led to new questions on the quality of participation by talking about
the deliberative process that generates public opinion. As mentioned earlier, this research would
focus on that problem by tackling the idea that homophily polarizes opinions preventing such
process from happening.
Homophily and Polarization in Social Media
Political homophily is a significant topic when discussing social media as it constitutes
the structure of the public sphere, whether social media would work as a pool of diverse opinions
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or an echo chamber. As cited in the literature, Dahlgren, deriving from Habermas, defined public
sphere as “a constellation of communicative spaces in society that permit the circulation of
information, ideas, debates, ideally in an unfettered manner, and also the formation of political
will.” The idea of a healthy public sphere will be further elaborated when the concept of
deliberation is discussed on the last section. For now, it is important to take note of the
significance of debates and engagement when discussing social media as a public sphere. In this
study, homophily will be seen as a counter discourse against the purpose of the public sphere as
it prevents discussion that should lead to deliberation.
Majority of the literature explained homophily using the Cognitive Dissonance and
Selective Exposure Theory. According to the theory, people develop stress and experience
pressure when they are confronted with ideas or information that diverts from what they believe.
Conversely, information that affirms their opinion gives people a sense of relief. Because of this,
people develop a tendency to expose themselves to discussions and information that reinforces
their belief in order to decrease cognitive dissonance. This behavior leads to the creation of
homogeneous groups consisting individuals with the same beliefs, education and social status. In
the realm of politics, homophily results to political polarization and echo chambers.
Psychological approach on the topic dominated the discourse of homophily. The most
common used theory for instance, the dissonance theory explains that selective exposure happens
when people avoid undesirable information or claims that are inconsistent with their beliefs
(defensive avoidance) or when they seek out alternatives that are consistent with their own
beliefs (confirmation bias), screening out perspectives different from them. Counter-attitudinal
exposure triggers negative emotions and rejecting them is rewarding. This behavior (whether
conscious or subconscious) creates a tendency for individuals to self-isolate within groups and
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polarize the citizenry. Likelihood of screening out other opinions is higher. The reinforcing
function of social media works by feeding its users the evidences they need to support their
claims and biases, proving themselves correct and giving them a network of people that agree
with them.
Another perspective on psychology was used in the topic by applying the concepts of
Social Psychology of Groups in explaining echo chambers and polarizations. Based on this
principle, highly cohesive communities tend to reject individuals who deviate or divert from
them. At the same time, individuals who belong to the said groups tend to develop extreme
values from what they originally believe and become harsher towards the views of outsiders.
What remains to be constant in these theories are the themes of reaffirming ones belief that leads
to isolation and self-censorship.
It was mentioned in the literature that the internet led to increased exposure to political
discussion as supported by previous studies, as political exposure happens more often on spaces
not solely devoted for political discussion. However, the claim was contested by future studies
that found out that people have a tendency to seek political opinions that affirms their values or
not that different from their own. This preference over information that supports their beliefs and
divides political discourse is what was known as homophily. With homophily, social media loose
the value of diversification of political social networks leading to an increased awareness and
political tolerance.
Colleoni, Rozza, and Arvidsson provided evidence on the existence of homophily
through the use of exact technology. However, even before then, many other researches already
made the same claim. In another study, it was also affirmed that social media is indeed
conducive to homophily and further extended that analysis by providing a link between
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homophily and polarization. According to this study, individuals tend to affiliate with people
who share the same ideas and stances with them. This deliberate association and formation of
groups lead to homophily. What worsens the state of discourse however is the fact that in social
media, in order to manage tensions, people tend to self-censor by refraining from posting.
Basically, echo chambers happen in social media because of great social risks and deliberate
avoidance of tension.
Many other factors were attributed to homophily. It was argued in one study that
homophily is a product of the public’s lack of trust on traditional media. The decreased
confidence of the American public on traditional media as a political institution may be
attributed to the media’s tendency to interpret rather than report news and their tendency to
sensationalize miniscule or irrelevant news. Because of this, the public resorted to social media
in order to cater to their own taste and serve their personal interest. According to the Virtuous
Circle Thesis, news media use and political engagement exists in a reinforcing cycle. Which
means that news media preference and usage affects the level of political interest of users and
vice versa. This in turn worsens the problem of polarization as it continues the cycle of feeding
the interest of the people and making them believe that the information that they get are the only
ones available.
Another research elevated the scholarship on the topic by focusing on echo chambers and
introducing the role of social media itself in the process of homophily through filter bubbles.
While technological advances may lead to exposure to diverse ideas, it also have a tendency to
limit individual exposure to opposing information that may challenge beliefs and values. Echo
chamber is the process from which individuals are exposed to information that came only from
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individuals with the same beliefs. Filter bubbles on the other hand is a phenomenon that
originated from the algorithms that select content based on previous behaviors.
In principle, the effects of filter bubbles were considered to be very harmful against the
cause of some forms of democracies. For the case of liberal democracies, filter bubbles limit the
choices and liberties of the people. For the case of deliberative democracies on the other hand,
harms civic discourse by preventing the clash of opposing beliefs. For contestatory democracies,
filter bubbles prevent the acquisition of evidences that could back contestation. For agonists,
filter bubbles silence the voice of the minority and the radicals.
Majority of researches on the topic of filter bubble however claims that the effect of filter
bubble on homophily (and polarization) is very miniscule in comparison to the deliberate
attempts of individuals to self-censor or form echo-chambers.
While the given explanations to the existence of homophily are so far dominated by the use of
psychological principles, an alternative was provided by a different study, giving a unique
perspective of the mechanisms that led to homophily. Using the Anticipated Agreement
hypothesis and Issue Publics Hypothesis, this study provided an explanation as to how the rise of
new media paved the way to selective exposure, which allows people to continuously tune in
one-sided sources while actively avoiding those that they do not like.
The Anticipated Agreement hypothesis posits that people, as voters, deliberately
subscribe to information that are consistent with their beliefs and reinforce these attitudes while
they actively avoid information that clashes with their beliefs. However, unlike the other theories
on selective exposure such as the cognitive dissonance theory, the researchers that utilized this
hypothesis suggest that this behavior is not just a product of people unconsciously trying to avoid
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incongruent information for consistencies sake but rather a result of their social background and
environment.
In support for this, the Issue Publics hypothesis states that the wide abundance of policy
issues make it impossible for voters to digest them all. Because of this, voters try to focus only
on issues that they deem to be relevant to them hence becoming a part of that issue’s “issue
public” and at the same time, in order to choose the candidate that will best represent their
interest, the voters try to seek information that agrees with their position in relation to the issues
that they chose. It only suggests that voters do not solely rely on partisan selectivity and
candidate-based selection but is also highly affected by issue-based selection.
Political elites, which refer to those who run for positions or hold political power, or for
some cases, have strong influence over the politics and policy of the state even if they do not
hold government positions themselves are becoming polarized as portrayed by strongly opposing
ideological positions and stances. However, this claim only holds true for the American
experience (the study is focused on the existence of selective exposure and polarization of the
American public) as the state of politics in the Philippines is entirely different.
The unique character of internet news media that differentiate it from traditional and print
media is its lack of incentive to be politically moderate or to lean towards the center of the
political spectrum. Stronger partisan attitudes are more present on alternative news media, hence
making it an environment that is very conducive to polarization. Selective exposure may
decrease with the use of continuous exposure to continuous choice of content. Participants were
shown to take a more centrist or even an opposite view from what they previously have.
Selective exposure is a determinant of citizen polarization. However, partisan selective exposure
is just one stage in the long process of polarization.
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The tendency for individuals within like-minded groups to agree with each other prevents
critical examination of information making them more inclined to develop extreme views. There
is a necessity for a balanced evaluation of arguments that homophily prevents from happening.
Group polarization, which is defined by a group leaning towards a certain opinion that moves
further into that same direction is a result of homophily. However, Polarization poses even more
harms in two levels. Since group dynamics are affected by naturally goal-directed nature of
humans to process information that supports pre-existing bias, hence within a group, there is a
lack of alternative or conflicting views and no incentives for self-criticism due to share values.
More than that there is a tendency for individuals to seek social acceptance by adjusting to the
dominant position in a group which makes it more polarized.
In summary, the existence of echo-chambers and selective exposure were generally
accepted to be the main contributory factors to political polarization in social media.
Polarization, which was defined earlier as the tendencies of groups with firm identities to have
extreme beliefs , is highly regressive against deliberative democracies as it prevents discussions
from occurring. Polarization in general discourages exchange of ideas which in turn reduces the
quality of discursive participation.
Therefore, even though deliberation as a political process is seen as beneficial to both
individual and the society, these benefits are being prevented by the problem of homophily.
Deliberation generally have a positive contribution on the level and quality of political
engagement and participation as it allows inclusivity through fair and equal representation of
interests. However, the state of the public sphere and the quality of participation in the present
is highly subjected to homophily. Homophily polarizes discourse and skews interaction as people
36
develop extreme views that prevent them from taking into consideration opposing ideas. This
makes deliberation counterproductive.
The researcher however will try to deviate from some traditions in the scholarship on
homophily. Rather than accepting the psychological approach the researcher will argue that it is
not enough to explain how politics work in a framework wherein people have to compete in
order to further their own interest. The researcher criticizes the assumptions of the psychological
approaches because these approaches easily concede that the behaviour being observed in the
study were products of a “natural tendency” as if it is something that is inherent to human
psychology.
The researcher argues that it is not a natural tendency that people subconsciously do, but
rather the people who experience homophily are fully aware of their actions.they consciously
choose to avoid and subscribe to information and that they align or join groups for certain goals.
These goals may include furthering ones interest by supporting policy makers or political courses
of action. More conclusion will be further derived as the study continues.
Political culture and history will be taken into consideration as to how people came up with such
decisions. More importantly, the literature lose important aspects with the lack of qualitative
studies. It fails to look at the perspective of the people and it lacks explanatory power on how
microlevel decisions are made by individuals that affects the group dynamics of their echo
chambers that would further lead to polarization. However, some information from the literature
will still be used to draw conclusion out of observations.
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CHAPTER III:
METHODOLOGY
Methods, Sampling and Research Plan
This research will use groups (Facebook groups) as the unit of analysis. The researcher
will focus on two classifications of groups in Facebook, the Pro-Duterte groups (Duterte
Supporters and Rody Duterte die hard Supporters International) and the Anti-Duterte Groups
(The Silent Majority and Leni Robredo Solid Supporters). These groups are chosen because of
the number of members that they have (ranging from two-hundred twenty thousand to one
thousand, chosen to have a point of comparison between larger and smaller groups) and the
activity in terms of posting and sharing (10+ posts a day, determined by Facebook indicators).
The researcher will use a digital ethnographic type of research that will mix many other types of
qualitative methods (semiotics for symbols and images, discourse analysis for narratives). The
reasoning for this is due to the fact that the phenomenon that would be observed in this study
cannot be answered with the simple use of an interview. There is a need for the researcher to
understand the world of meanings of the subjects in order to provide an informed claim of how
the phenomena happens as guided by the theories.
More than that, the experience of an ethnographic view would give an insider perspective
of how people under homophily reacts in terms of attitudes and content. However, it does not
mean that the research will be limited to observations alone. The interpretation of the images and
contexts that the researcher will gather will be backed by the literature (using a coding scheme
for War on Drug Narratives, and Political Organizational Models for issue navigation).
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Special considerations will be taken for conducting a digital ethnography of the topic.
Similar to ordinary research sites, the internet also show unique forms of social interaction. Each
community also have their own performed culture and artefacts (in form of videos and images)
which could give the researcher an idea on the motivations of the users and the values that they
try to protect or further in their actions. Social media is limited by the lack of actual physical
sites and fast-moving realities. On the other hand, digital ethnography is advantageous as social
media is strongly embedded in the everyday life of its physically distant members.
Social media research is more likely to illicit more truthful, more personal and more
intimate responses which is important for this study since it covers values and beliefs that leads
to certain courses of action that for a very long time, taken as norms due to their “naturalness”
under the psychological approaches. It allows a deeper analysis of discourses in textual and
visual forms, something that is difficult to observe in an actual site. The time-element of internet
ethnography allows access to interactions that took place for a very long time before since
interactions are automatically archived in the process. Even though there is a lack of access to
physical indicators such as gestures and facial expressions, internet ethnography compensates
through other forms of indicators (through the use of capitalizations, spacing, emoticons, meta-
messages, images, videos)
For this research, the researcher will look for indicators of policy-issue preference and
attitude navigation techniques by individual posters and commenters while constantly forming
and reforming the standards and operational definitions of the subject in order to adapt to the
unique character of Philippine political culture wherein parties are not particularly different from
each other and people do not necessarily subscribe or identify with certain ideologies. Hence, in
the process of ethnographic research, the researcher will try to develop a set of values and
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attitudes that pro-Duterte supoorters hold in contrast with anti-Duterte people. With the use of
the operational definitions earlier, the researcher will observe manifestations of narratives used
as strategy (packaging, involvement, and process moves) to form discourses and ways of
thinking about a policy-issue.
The researcher classified the groups as echo-chambers due to the preference of the
following activities which are common indicators of homophily:
• Constant liking, sharing, and commenting on posts that support ones beliefs (beliefs and
attitudes characterized based on the description of the group)
• Not liking, sharing, and commenting (or antagonistic commenting) on posts that opposes ones
beliefs
The researcher chose to focus on a single issue that remains to be a prominent issue for
the current administration, that is, the war on drugs. Limiting the study to one issue will make it
easier to focus on a single set of discourses accurately and with precision. A coding scheme will
be provided in the analysis that strongly derives from the discourses defined in the literature of
war on drugs in the Philippines (Barrera, 2017; Johnson & Fernquest, 2018; Reyes, 2016).
Following the strategies suggested by the Issue-Selling Model, the discourses on war on drugs
that will be used in the analysis of posts and comments will greatly focus on policy-attitudes on
solving the drug problem, the values involved in the issue, personal and collective narratives and
sub-narratives, and the roles of the government and the society with regards to the issue, based
on the perspective of pro- and anti-Duterte groups (Barrera, 2017; Johnson & Fernquest, 2018;
Reyes, 2016).
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At the end of this research, the researcher aims to provide and develop a mechanism that
suggests a possible model proposing how social media echo-chambers work (with similarity to
other forms of political organizations such as political parties) by looking deeper into the process
and experiencing it in the perspective of those who live the reality of the phenomena first hand.
Coding Scheme
The first level of codes labels the narratives used in discussing the war on drugs. These
are common themes that frequently emerge on discussions of war on drugs as an issue as
observed by the scholars cited in the literature. Codes at this level will be used to imply and
confirm that a post or comment involves a discussion of the war on drugs if related themes are
projected in a certain piece of raw data. The codes include perspectives on the issue, policy
suggestions, and objectives and motivations.
The second level of coding aims to provide an answer to the research question. The codes were
generated through the help of various organizational models and agenda setting concepts in order
to simulate a working system of interaction that follows the theory.
Practical and Ethical Considerations
There is a wide variety of reason for choosing an ethnographic approach for the research.
First of all, the lack of available data on candidate identification and attitudes make it difficult to
establish a base line or matrix that can be used to identify narratives that indicate the use of
political organizational strategies not just for echo-chambers but to social media groups in the
Philippines as well in general. This is partly due to the fact that majority of the researches
available cater towards a party-based politics, whereas Philippine politics differ significantly due
to the lack of established easily distinguishable parties leading to politician-based and issue-
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based variants of politics. More importantly, given the theories that would be adapted, an
ethnographic approach will be necessary to create an assessment of values and importance of
issues based on the responses of other members of the echo-chambers.
For ethical considerations, the researcher decided to conduct an undercover participant
observation on the above mentioned communities. This is necessary in order to get a first-hand
observation of the attitudes of the people. Gathering this type of data will be difficult without an
undercover research since entry to the community will be automatically impossible partly due to
the position of the researcher as a UP student and as someone who does not align with most
values of the said communities. More than that, this method is the most efficient way of getting
truthful behaviour without making the people wary of any form of perceived threat since the
issues that will be tackled may be seen as sensitive and controversial. Directly interacting with
the researcher might lead to falsified behaviour because of fear or contempt.
Basic ethical considerations will be followed in the study including anonymity and
privacy. Strict measures will also be taken in terms of handling any information or data gathered
from the subjects. No information will be disclosed about the subjects’ information details
outside the study. Any personal information from the discourse analysis will be anonimized and
censored. No participant will be harmed, physically or psychologically during the study. Lastly,
responsible handling, storage and disposal of data will be done by the researcher.
Case Selection
There is currently a wide selection of literature that tackles this concept. However, there
are still a lot of things to be learned in the subject that are not yet touched by experts probably
because of the fact that the subject matter is relatively new in comparison with other topics in
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political science. Majority of the literature available on the subject tries to reinforce the claim
that social media is a new form of public sphere and in line with this, many also tried to prove
the existence of homophily in the social media and almost all, if not all, of these papers
succeeded in doing so. Other than that, many literatures also tried to relate homophily on the
existence of other cases that are deemed to be problematic especially under the conception that
social media is a public sphere. These concerns involved the relationship between homophily in
social media and the way policy issue attitudes are formed around them through certain
discourses, and the mechanism from which homophily on social media can lead to other sort of
political actions.
While the current literature succeeded in proving the existence of homophily in social
media, the literature failed to provide a substantive explanation on how the phenomena occur.
Historically, many theories were already provided to explain the occurrence of homophily,
however, such theories were not yet applied for the case of social media. Even if there are some
who already succeeded on applying these theories (assuming that there already are), those who
tried to do so are small in numbers, hence conducting the study could still benefit the literature
by linking these theories specifically to social media and affirming (assuming that it was already
done before) previous studies that did the same. More than that, literatures that theorized on
homophily and related cases such as echo chambers and selective exposure failed to give an in-
depth discussion of how the matter occurs internally and their dynamics especially in terms of
focusing on the behaviour of individuals under homophily.
Given these, the study will try to fill the gap on the literature by trying to study
homophily based on the theories provided by the literature, explaining how political values and
policy-issues are navigated to promote and forward said values, and nuancing it to the
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occurrence of the phenomenon for the case of social media and the Philippine political
experience specifically. More than that. The study would also try to dwell on the personal or
individual level of the phenomenon by looking at the actions of the people inside echo-chambers
and their awareness of the existence of homophily and the responding implications of it. As a
contribution on the larger study of public spheres, this research would also try to prove the
existence of a strategy whether conscious or unconscious that tries to forward interests while at
the same time considering a collective benefit.
This research will focus on a two opposite cases of homophily based on the experience of
the Philippines and the social media usage of its population. Before giving an elaborate
explanation of the phenomenon, it would be necessary to justify why the set parameters of this
research were chosen as they are. Firstly, Facebook was chosen by the researcher as a specific
example of social media network to give focus on the study because for three main reasons.
Firstly, based on a research conducted by the Pew Research Center, Facebook is the most
popular social media platform all around the globe with a significant difference in terms of
subscribers in comparison with other popular social media networks such as Twitter and
Instagram (Facebook remains the most popular social media platform, November 10, 2016).
Secondly, and what seems to be the most important consideration, is Facebook’s ability to
provide a necessary environment for discourse given the possibility of making long informative
and detailed posts, create posts from which people could also share news, videos, and images,
and with these posts also allowing other people to show sympathy, agreement or disagreement,
and share their opinion through commenting.
More than that, Facebook also shows the factors needed for the maintenance of a public
sphere such as enough social capital provided by its wide viewership from which people could
44
try to connect and reconnect with friends, co-workers and other people that they know in real
life, as well as Facebook’s ability to create groups and pages that categorizes people based on
their hobbies, values, beliefs, and interests.
More importantly, indicators of homophily are more observable on Facebook especially
with consideration to other boundaries such as spatial boundary. For spatial boundary, the
researcher chose the Philippines for two reasons. First is because it was declared as the 6th
largest consumer of Facebook across the globe as of 2017 with 69 million Facebook users
(Leading countries based on number of Facebook users as of July 2017 (in millions), July 2017).
Second is because of its previous and current experiences on the intermingling of social media
and politics to be further explained later. The researchers deems it to be an important case
primarily because the usership of Facebook in the Philippines is a good example that can be
generalized with the experiences of other countries but more importantly, the usage of Facebook
in the Philippines is a good example of how social media can cross the boundaries of gender,
ethnicity, language, religion, socio-cultural origins, and socioeconomic location.
While majority of the literature on social media and politics talks about experiences on elections
just like the US elections, it can be said that that kind of perspective is a little bit narrow and not
widely encompassing. Capitalizing on this example, the experience of the Philippines however is
not much different. In the previous 2016 election in the Philippines social media played a
significant role in driving public opinion and changing the tides of the election. The reason why
elections were chosen as case studies for the research on homophily is probably because of the
fact that indicators of homophily and its effect, such as polarization, are more observable during
these events. However, the experiences of the Philippines are entirely different in a sense that
elections are not ideology based. This can be attributed to various factors such as the lack of
45
difference between the “ideologies” of the mainstream parties and politicians, and the persistence
of individualized politician-based politics rather than a party-based politics, and the clientelist
nature of the Philippine political culture from which politicians are motivated more by creating
policies that would gain them more votes rather than having an ideology while the voters,
consequently base their votes not on ideologies or values but on outcomes and policies, and
many other factors.
This is where the problem would arise. First, is the concept of homophily limited to
ideologies, and secondly, is it possible for homophily to exist without an environment that caters
to the existence of ideologies? While majority focused on ideologies, these researchers cannot be
blamed at all because they based their research on personal experiences readily available in their
environment. However, it leaves a gap on the literature. In order to solve this problem, the
research will use the experience of the Philippines in its current experiences where people in the
social media are divided based on values that are not attributable to ideologies.
This lack of attribution comes from the Philippine history of its political culture and the
rule of Rodrigo Duterte, the current president who also happened to be a populist without a clear
ideology, but whose rule can be easily characterized and distinguished by policies that caters to
his own conception of what the Philippine problem is and his proposed solutions. Even if there is
a lack of ideology that divides the country, the Philippine experience on the current rule of
Duterte distinguishes the people from those who support the administration and those who do
not, making an implicit divide with characterized and recognizable values such as prioritization
of the war on drugs, human rights being secondary to the “security” of the people and other
things.
46
The study aims to apply various theories in studying the subject matter. First is the
application of Habermas’s conception of public sphere and applying it to social media. In
support of this, Putnam’s social capital theory that relates the factors provided by social media,
such as social network and trust, as factors for stimulating deliberation, an important concept in
the study of public spheres. However, these theories and principles are only explanatory of social
media being a public sphere and having the necessary criteria to facilitate deliberation and hence
not the primary theory of the study. The main goal of the study is to generate a model that can
display the political aspects of echo chambers not as homogenous groups but as conscious sites
of political interaction.
In summary, this research is a single within case level of theory centered research,
focusing on the current homophily experience of the Philippines in Facebook aimed at improving
or modifying the theory that states that homophily is caused by personal interests that people
calculated over their decisions by following this assumption and peering into the processes,
mechanisms and dynamics that confirms the benefits that people ought to get from joining echo-
chambers. The study is case oriented since it describes cases as wholes, assuming that the causal
mechanism provided by the process of individuals forwarding their political values and policy-
issue interests within echo-chambers. The study is descriptive in a sense that it proposes a model
from which people utilize organizational strategies, considering their audience to have shared
experiences and interests with them.
47
Chapter IV
Data Presentation and Analysis
This chapter details the themes of the observations and narratives generated throughout
the data collection and analysis process. The discussions organize and try to make sense of the
gathered data based on the available theories and models previously discussed. This chapter
provides an explanation on how the data answers the research question and the possible
explanations linking the actual data to their theoretical implications. The literature will provide
the theoretical backing for the analysis. For emerging themes that the initial coding scheme and
model failed to take into considerations, various alternative explanations will be provided based
on the things currently known regarding the topic while suggesting measures and instruments
that can help verify such analyses.
This chapter is divided into four major sections. The first section presents an
ethnographic descriptions of the process of accessing and entering the communities. The second
section provides ethnographic descriptions of the site, to be divided into two sub-sections: 1) the
digital location and setting and 2) the social environment. The third section provides the themes
generated from the posts and comments on the case study of war on drugs. This section will be
divided into three subsections. The first subsection discusses the narratives that dominate the
discourse of war on drugs which helps springboard the succeeding discussions. The second
subsection discusses the meta-discourses that directly responds to the research question,
analysing the interactions, strategies and mechanisms using the theoretical backing of the model
nuancing it to the formation of policy issue attitudes. The fourth section discusses the
ethnographic reflections of the researcher and the results of the discourse analysis in relation to
the theory.
48
In the first level of discourse analysis proved to be more simplistic than what was
expected from the initial coding scheme. For the pro-Duterte groups, majority of instances
showed no strong use of words or phrases that signify support for the war on drugs. However, it
should not mislead the analysis since the placing of the support or agreement in the policy is
present in the tone and contextual cues of the conversations. A dominant part of the content were
in passive agreement of the punitive-proactive approach (coded I.A.1, I.B.2.) on the drug issue.
In this sense the data are passive since they do not voice out words of agreement or disagreement
however, the context takes the current punitive-proactive approach as passable and not
contestable. Furthermore, advanced levels of coding (to be discussed on the next section) will
show other cues that indirectly signify support such as promoting the political actors that support
the policy or praising the achievements of the policy.
The pro-Duterte groups also followed the expected pattern of motivations that utilize
narratives of deterrence (I.C.1.a.) and the safety and protection of the greater society from drug-
related individuals (I.C.1.b.). The case for anti-Duterte groups is different in many ways. The
level of engagement of members is far lower than those in pro-Duterte groups. Call-outs against
the drug war are more vocal and straightforward. However, unlike the Duterte-groups where the
framing of discourse in support for punishment clearly draws from the narrative of criminality,
the policy preference is not very much pronounced in the case of anti-Duterte groups. Remarks
that condemn the “inhumane” drug war were common but the expected alternative of
rehabilitation (I.A.2. and I.A.3.) did not come out as often. On the very rare occasions that
rehabilitation came out as a narrative, the distinction between the medical and social framing of
the drug issue was not distinguished or articulated. The distinction between reactive
implementation for anti-Duterte groups and proactive for pro-Duterte groups is as clear as night
49
and day because the discourses the implies these characteristics are almost always present
directly (human rights and due process) or indirectly (zero-tolerance on drugs)
Moving on to the second level of analysis, these narratives will now be given some
meaning and purpose. Following the coding scheme, the use of Exposed Agenda is always
present in almost all instances of engagement (comments and posts) and a very good explanation
for this is due to the fact that the single-issue words effectively serve their purpose as
determiners of support towards a policy-issue. Majority of the examples include drug-use and
criminality for the pro and human rights and due process for the anti.
The discussion of salience (II.A.I) is relatively common in almost all groups however, it
changes its forms and orientation in various ways depending on the dynamics of usage. For
example, when the war on drugs is discussed inside the pro-Duterte echo chambers as an
effective policy, members of the groups champions its success and salience as a very relevant
issue. However, when news of engagement from the opposition condemning the horrors of the
war on drugs get reported, pro-Duterte members retort to narratives of throwing a different issue
(supposedly more salient), such as poverty and economy which they claim the oppositions
should focus on resolving rather than criticizing Duterte. However, this is not a homogenous
response since in various instances it can also be observed that pro-Duterte groups would still
fight for the relevance of the policy issue even in face of criticism, arguing on the difference of
what is salient for the elites and for the common people. At this point, it can be established that
inconsistencies exist inside echo chambers brought by minor differences at looking at an issue.
However, the difference is not theoretically or conceptually significant to offer a difference in
values in unison with such difference.
50
The themes of diagnosis and prognosis are the most overused strategies utilized by both
posters and commenters from the pro-Duterte groups. Through the use of narratives the supply
information on nature of the drug issue in the Philippines and why the war on drugs is the best
policy to counter it. In frequent instances, both diagnosis and prognosis coexist in a post or
comment. The prognosis may also appear in a subtle less direct manner, sometimes even absent
physically, as if it was left for the reader of the post or comment to figure out how the state of
things as discussed leads to the war on drugs as the best solution.
The diagnosis and prognosis can be said to be the most creative and elaborate strategy of
forming and shaping policy issue attitudes. Through the process, members get to utilize personal
and collective narratives that will change or clarify the perspective on the matter. The narratives
previously mentioned in the first level of discourse analysis gets their full utility in the way
members of echo chambers try to frame the issue to their interest. For instance, the narratives of
criminality, as they connected to the results of rampant drug-use, commonly gets exploited by
describing vivid images of the rape, murder and other heinous crimes, strengthening the support
for their preferred solution by making people averse of the alternative they try to paint.
More importantly, this is the strategy members use to frame the effectiveness of the
policy issue to their advantage. This is commonly present to pro-Duterte groups where
discourses of deterrence are used to describe how, as they claim logically, people are now more
afraid to do drugs due to the violent consequences and hence if the policy is doing its job, then it
should be retained. Moreover, this strategy is utilized to portray how the policy is at the same
time not as effective as what it could have been, by using narratives of human rights and the
presence of an opposition both portrayed to play as obstacles to fully implementing the drug war
without holding back. Surprisingly enough, the use of discourses to describe conditions and
51
policy options is not as present in anti-Duterte groups. However, it should be noted that this
could also be a product of a significant lack of engagement from their members compared to the
pro.
In conclusion of the first part of the second level of analysis, it can therefore be said that
the use of agenda exposing strategies is more common among pro-Duterte echo chambers than
the anti-Duterte ones. However, even among pro-Duterte groups, the framing of such strategies
still vary, but not to the extent that it creates a space for interest fragmentation or contradiction.
This implies that pro-Duterte echo chambers project more efforts to make their policy visible and
get them through to the other members.
On the mechanisms that explores the microsphere aspect of the echo chamber, themes
II.B.2. and II.B.3 did not manifest. Reporting of political information (II.B.4.) manifested in
many ways through news articles shared in both pro-and anti- groups. In a variety of instances,
the two sides even share the same articles in their groups to those with the other (although the
captions vary in terms of digesting and framing the news). Alternative forms of news reporting
or citizen journalism did not manifest however it is observable that pro-Duterte share a
significant amount of news and statistics from non-mainstream news sources, some of even
questionable integrity due to a lack of professional background. Call for political participation is
the most dominant and most common strategy that vocally suggests for an action in both sides.
However, political action in this sense is limited to campaigning and calling for votes for a
political candidate alone. Other forms of political participation were not included.
What these findings suggest is that, even within echo chambers, the groups still function
as a microsphere with the capabilities that the groups can provide that contribute to the political
knowledge of its members. However, it should still be noted that the political knowledge
52
provided in these groups are not absolute, they are still subjected to selective exposure that feeds
on the initial biases of the members. Even though calls for political participation can be classified
as deliberative as it promotes political activity and engagement, such observation is also subject
to various interpretations. It can be a function of the campaign season which is a very likely
explanation on how policies are attached to such personalities and voting for them could imply
pursuing such policy action.
Tackling both issue ownership and attention at once, the observations are very
straightforward, pro-Duterte groups claim ownership over the issue of drugs since it is Duterte’s
choice of policy importance from his campaign up to his administration. On the other hand, anti-
Duterte groups try to engage at the same issue, converging their interests with those of the other
group. In terms of attention, both groups manifest presence (although indirect) of the opposing
opinion in their groups through shared news articles. Surprisingly, both groups engage the
articles offensively, directly attacking both character and policy positions of their oppositions.
What it means is that the claim that echo chambers get limited exposure to ideas can be
falsifiable for this case. However, it should be noteworthy that the presentation of the idea takes
a foreign form, an imported opinion rather than grown from the roots of the echo chambers
themselves. This implies that exposure within echo chambers might diversify, but the
composition of the audience still remains the same.
Lastly, on issue selling, which is the main model of this study. All strategies (II.E.1,
II.E.2., and II.E.3.) manifested in the data collected. In many instances, both pro and anti-Duterte
produced posts and comments that claim a common or shared interest among the members. For
instance, pro-Duterte members would directly or indirectly assume that they all value “the
53
security of their families” to sell the narrative of supporting the drug war, where as anti-Duterte
groups would evoke narratives of valuing human life in order to campaign against the killings.
In terms of involvement, a new theme emerged which focuses on the identity of the
people involved in the discourse of the war on drugs. It can be divided into three sub-themes
namely those who promotes the policy, those who are against the policy, and those who are
affected or for whom the policy is. The first sub-theme is used as a strategy to garner political
support to those “expected to further the interests of the group” through actual political
participation. Those who are against the policy automatically gets negative reactions from the
members. The last however is the most relevant and defining manifestation if involvement. This
is where members of the echo chamber utilize and combine various policy issue strategies in
order to make it appealing by claiming that they (together with the group) possesses an exclusive
identity, constructed through a common goal and interest, bonded by a shared experience,
possesses a different take on the policy issue which cannot be grasped by their constructed other.
Such construction is very visible among pro-Duterte groups who claims that the elite
“Dilawan” do not experience the harms of being victimized by drug addicts. Lastly is on process
moves, where, almost all of the posts contain news articles or statistics with them which helps in
gaining legitimacy.
What this section implies is that, with regards to the research question, policy issues
undergo various stages of formation from agenda exposure where values and their themes get
labelled and prepared for recognition, up to issue selling where in strategic methods were used to
increase credibility and legitimacy not just in the supposed quality of issue being sold, but also as
actors playing as members of the groups. In terms of transformation, the research question falls
54
since the observation proved that intrinsically, there are no substantial conceptual differences
between members of the same echo chamber.
However, there are various ways to interpret such findings. 1) The data confirms the
dominant narrative that the members of echo chambers indeed agree in all levels at all times. 2)
Since these social media echo chambers are informal political organizations – they do not have
the coercive strength to get people to engage (which is otherwise a hassle to these individuals).
People will not lose if they do not share their differing opinion whereas, there are harms of
getting kicked out of the group or getting mobbed by fellow members in social media if one
shares their different opinion. This aversion towards the discussion however still follows
selective exposure phenomenon - an intrinsic filter that prevents people from engaging those
with different ideas. 3) Facebook built-in mechanisms provide homophilous capabilities from
which FB group administrators can select which posts to allow to get through, which comments
can be deleted etc. While this is perfectly plausible - proof cannot be established since data that
will prove such claim is only available to the admins themselves – however this is not an
impossible research venture and can be tackled on future researches.
55
Chapter V
Conclusion and Recommendations
This study aims to answer the question: “How do echo chambers work in forming policy
issue attitudes?” Throughout the course of the study, the data proved and disproved various
claims regarding the study of echo chambers. In one hand, the data confirmed that within echo
chambers, a large majority of the vocal population of the members display homogenously similar
policy attitude preferences. There are no theoretically significant differences on the members’
positions and takes with that of their corresponding echo chambers when it come to the policy
issue of the war on drugs for both pro- and anti-Duterte Facebook echo chambers. This is
consistent for both Facebook posts and comments, the two most usual forms of engagement
within echo chambers. However, it is noteworthy that the motivations or framing of reasons
behind such policy positions appear to show slight differences but such differences are not
enough to contradict the claims of others who support similar positions.
The data also debunked one major claim on echo chambers: that echo chambers only
show one side of an issue. According to the data, echo chambers also show the perspective and
opinion of key political actors from the other side of the policy through the use of news articles.
However, it should be emphasized that the opposing views still remain to be a foreign opinion
(meaning, something that did not come from the members of the echo chambers themselves but
from outside the group). It implies that even at the presence of an opposing perspective, the
overall attitude of the echo chambers still remain to be homogenous. However it should also be
noted that the presence of these opposing opinions allow the members of echo chambers to
engage with the other end of the policy issues. More than that, opposing opinions serve various
functions to the groups such as in terms of establishing differences in and strengthening claims
56
over group identities (against their oppositions), and in terms of reducing the credibility of the
opposition by attacking the soundness of their claims or the credibility of their character.
Secondly, even if the echo chambers, based on the observable data gathered from
comments and posts, were confirmed to be homogenous in nature, such groups still displayed
various manifestations of attempts to sell issue framings and policy issue attitudes strongly based
on exploiting shared interests, experiences and identities. This could lead to various conclusions
on the functions that issue selling serves for these echo chambers. It shows that even without
contestation, the conscious process of policy attitude formation and transformation manifests in
echo chambers either to serve as a pre-emptive engagement towards those outside the echo
chambers (especially their direct oppositions) or to convince those who are not yet fully
convinced members of the echo chambers who remain close to the middleground of the policy
spectrum. Such developments in the framing of their policy attitudes helps them engage with
imported knowledge from their opposition while, and as a microsphere, prepares them for
possible engagements or tangible political actions beyond their digital groups.
The study projects promising results in terms of searching for a middleground to which
researchers can engage echo chambers. The deliberation strategies, albeit not direct
manifestations of deliberation, suggests that rationality and legitimacy are values that still remain
relevant inside echo chambers. Discourses that can involve actual deliberation of policies
through the introduction and engagement of an opposing perspective can still possibly exist if
done deliberately and effectively through the use of evidences and interests articulation of any
echo chamber populations.
There are still a lot to learn from echo chambers in the way they work and affect the
everyday life of many people by various means. Because of this, it is safe to assume that
57
approaches like this study helps in dissecting the mechanisms and motivations of echo chambers
by abandoning biases and trying to look at the conscious political efforts present in the actions of
those people who, providing more knowledge on the reasons and interests that they have and
help every one of us achieve better understanding of each other.
58
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Appendix
1.1 Coding Scheme
I. 1st Set of Codes: Narratives on the War on Drugs
A. Policy Objectives
1. Punishment: drug-use is a criminal issue; product of personal choice;
criminals must be held accountable
2. Rehabilitation (A): drug-use is a medical issue; drug users are patients;
patients must be treated
3. Rehabilitation (B): drug-use is a societal issue; there are social and
economic reasons for drug involvement; rooted from poverty and
corruption; they must be helped
B. Policy Implementation
1. Reactive: drug users are individuals corrupted by the society; they must be
protected by the society; invoke human rights and due process; inclusive
2. Proactive: communitarian/common good; violence is allowed; zero-
tolerance; exclusive
Punitive-Proactive Policies: protection of the “good” law abiding citizens
and the policemen who are just doing their job
C. Motivations
1. Vehicle for Political Message (supports the policy)
a. Narrative of Deterrence
b. Narrative of Safety and Protection (for the greater society)
2. Violence from ordinary citizens and vigilante groups (supports the policy)
69
3. Intrinsic value of life and humanity (supports the policy)
4. Opportunities for redemption (supports the policy)
II. 2nd Set of Codes: Strategies of Policy Issue Attitude Formation
A. Exposed Agenda: use of single-issue words in order to thematically distinguish
a policy agenda; manifests as codes following how the codes of “I. Narratives on
the War on Drugs” are used as single-issue distinguisher
1. Salience: Which issues to think about
2. Diagnosis: Discusses the Nature of the Policy Issue
3. Prognosis: Proposes a Policy Issue Attitude/Solution
B. Microshpere: discussions of issue for collective interest; commonly refers to
actual political actions and resources
1. Call for political participation for the group’s interest
2. Plan for collective public demand
3. Request assistance for political information
4. Reporting of political information/alternative journalism and news
reporting
C. Issue Ownership: claims over a policy issue (best issues vs. salient issues, or a
combination)
1. Ownership
2. Avoidance
3. Convergence
D. Attention to the Opposition
1. Offensive
70
2. Defensive
E. Issue Selling
1. Packaging: connecting narratives with the dominant organization values (ex.
claims of shared interests)
2. Involvement: who are involved
a. Defining the group vs. the other
b. Formal (main actors involved) vs. Informal (indirect involvement)
3. Process Moves: technical strategies that appeal to credibility (ex. preparations,
research, statistics, sources)
71
1.2 Sample Coding Scheme (Tabular Form)
A0208-A1 A0208-A2 A0210-A1 A0210-B1 A0210-B2
I.A. Yes
I.A.1. Yes
I.A.2. No
I.A.3. No
I.B. Yes
I.B.1. No
I.B.2. Yes
I.C. Yes
I.C.1. Yes
I.C.1.a. Yes
I.C.1.b Yes
I.C.2. No
I.C.3. No
I.C.4. No
II.A. Yes
II.A.1. Drugs
II.A.2. Criminality
II.A.3. EJK
II.B. N/A
II.B.1. N/A
72
II.B.2. N/A
II.B.3. N/A
II.B.4. N/A
II.C. War on
Drugs
II.C.1. Yes
II.C.2. No
II.C.3. No
II.D. Yes
II.D.1. Yes
II.D.2. No
II.E. Yes
II.E.1. Filipino
Concern
II.E.2. Yes
II.E.2.a. Mahihirap
(poor)
II.E.2.b. Dilawan
II.E.3. News Article
(Non-
Mainstream)