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Investigating the unintended effects of television advertising among children in former-Soviet Bulgaria

Extensive research has been carried out to examine the unintended effects of television advertising on children in Western Europe. Little, however, is known about effects in Eastern European settings. Eastern European countries were part of the former USSR and its Soviet regime, meaning that all for...

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Published in:Journal of children and media 2020-04, Vol.14 (2), p.141-157
Main Authors: Opree, Suzanna J., Petrova, Siana, Rozendaal, Esther
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description Extensive research has been carried out to examine the unintended effects of television advertising on children in Western Europe. Little, however, is known about effects in Eastern European settings. Eastern European countries were part of the former USSR and its Soviet regime, meaning that all forms of commercial advertising were prohibited. Current parents and educators experienced the shift to capitalism first-hand and are particularly critical of consumer culture. This study adds to the current body of literature by studying unintended effects on advertising on children in a new context (i.e., Sofia, Bulgaria) and exploring the moderating effects of children's advertising literacy. We collected data among 273 8- to 11-year-olds and found that advertising exposure increases children's materialism and consumer involvement. We also found that children's conceptual advertising literacy buffered the effect on materialism for children with low advertising exposure, but enhanced the effect for children with high advertising exposure.
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source Taylor & Francis
subjects advertising effects
advertising literacy
Bulgaria
children
Children & youth
consumer involvement
Eastern Europe
life satisfaction
Materialism
Media literacy
Social impact
Television advertising
title Investigating the unintended effects of television advertising among children in former-Soviet Bulgaria
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