Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt

Trust remains fundamental to an audience’s engagement with digital journalism, yet research has predominantly focused on Western contexts, overlooking trust dynamics in diverse digital environments. This study examines news media trust and civic engagement in Egypt’s evolving digital landscape, comp...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hesham Dinana, Dina Ahmed Ali, Ahmed Taher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Series:Journalism and Media
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-5172/6/2/61
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849431778092122112
author Hesham Dinana
Dina Ahmed Ali
Ahmed Taher
author_facet Hesham Dinana
Dina Ahmed Ali
Ahmed Taher
author_sort Hesham Dinana
collection DOAJ
description Trust remains fundamental to an audience’s engagement with digital journalism, yet research has predominantly focused on Western contexts, overlooking trust dynamics in diverse digital environments. This study examines news media trust and civic engagement in Egypt’s evolving digital landscape, comparing Western and national digital news consumption patterns. Using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling with data from 426 Egyptian digital news consumers, we apply a four-factor trust model to analyze (1) the relationship between trust propensity and trust in digital news content and (2) how journalist assessment relates to both content trust and civic engagement across platforms. Our results reveal significant differences in trust formation, whereby trust propensity strongly predicts content trust for Western digital media (β = 0.440) but weakly for national digital media (β = 0.191), while journalist assessment consistently influences both content trust and civic outcomes across platforms. Our findings contribute to digital journalism theory by illuminating how journalist credibility functions as a trust anchor across platforms. For digital journalism practice, we identify platform-specific trust-building strategies for Western and national digital news organizations operating in complex media environments. This study extends digital journalism research beyond Western-centric models, demonstrating how cultural context, educational factors, and platform characteristics shape digital trust pathways.
format Article
id doaj-art-8d783f167d9146d88e0a6991d329244f
institution Kabale University
issn 2673-5172
language English
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Journalism and Media
spelling doaj-art-8d783f167d9146d88e0a6991d329244f2025-08-20T03:27:32ZengMDPI AGJournalism and Media2673-51722025-04-01626110.3390/journalmedia6020061Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in EgyptHesham Dinana0Dina Ahmed Ali1Ahmed Taher2Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, The American University in Cairo, New Cairo 11835, EgyptDepartment of Journalism and Mass Communication, School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, The American University in Cairo, New Cairo 11835, EgyptDepartment of Journalism and Mass Communication, School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, The American University in Cairo, New Cairo 11835, EgyptTrust remains fundamental to an audience’s engagement with digital journalism, yet research has predominantly focused on Western contexts, overlooking trust dynamics in diverse digital environments. This study examines news media trust and civic engagement in Egypt’s evolving digital landscape, comparing Western and national digital news consumption patterns. Using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling with data from 426 Egyptian digital news consumers, we apply a four-factor trust model to analyze (1) the relationship between trust propensity and trust in digital news content and (2) how journalist assessment relates to both content trust and civic engagement across platforms. Our results reveal significant differences in trust formation, whereby trust propensity strongly predicts content trust for Western digital media (β = 0.440) but weakly for national digital media (β = 0.191), while journalist assessment consistently influences both content trust and civic outcomes across platforms. Our findings contribute to digital journalism theory by illuminating how journalist credibility functions as a trust anchor across platforms. For digital journalism practice, we identify platform-specific trust-building strategies for Western and national digital news organizations operating in complex media environments. This study extends digital journalism research beyond Western-centric models, demonstrating how cultural context, educational factors, and platform characteristics shape digital trust pathways.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-5172/6/2/61digital journalismnews media trustcivic engagementEgyptcross-platform comparisontrust propensity
spellingShingle Hesham Dinana
Dina Ahmed Ali
Ahmed Taher
Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt
Journalism and Media
digital journalism
news media trust
civic engagement
Egypt
cross-platform comparison
trust propensity
title Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt
title_full Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt
title_fullStr Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt
title_full_unstemmed Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt
title_short Trust Pathways in Digital Journalism: Comparing Western and National News Media Influence on Civic Engagement in Egypt
title_sort trust pathways in digital journalism comparing western and national news media influence on civic engagement in egypt
topic digital journalism
news media trust
civic engagement
Egypt
cross-platform comparison
trust propensity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-5172/6/2/61
work_keys_str_mv AT heshamdinana trustpathwaysindigitaljournalismcomparingwesternandnationalnewsmediainfluenceoncivicengagementinegypt
AT dinaahmedali trustpathwaysindigitaljournalismcomparingwesternandnationalnewsmediainfluenceoncivicengagementinegypt
AT ahmedtaher trustpathwaysindigitaljournalismcomparingwesternandnationalnewsmediainfluenceoncivicengagementinegypt