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Source Mapping - Coggle Diagram
Source Mapping
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“Children face specific digital risks, including commercial manipulation and targeted marketing that exploits developmental vulnerabilities” (OECD, 2021).
Shows that an international policy organization recognizes targeted advertising as a political concern affecting youth protection.
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Demonstrates that teens in developed countries are structurally vulnerable to social-media advertising.
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“Evidence suggests that social media influences youth behavior, identity, and emotional well-being, raising concerns for EU child protection policies” (European Parliament, 2023).
Connects advertising influence to political action within the EU, showing government recognition of behavioral risks.
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European Parliament. (2023). The influence of social media on the development of children and young people.
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“Minors are routinely exposed to manipulative digital marketing practices that challenge existing legal protections” (Verdoodt & Lievens, 2024).
Highlights failures in political regulation and the inability of current laws to fully protect minors.
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Verdoodt, V., & Lievens, E. (2024). Manipulative digital marketing practices targeting youth. Ghent University Press.
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“Social media marketing significantly shapes attitudes and purchase intentions among young consumers” (Duffett, 2017).
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Duffett, R. (2017). Influence of social media marketing communications on young consumers. Journal of Youth Consumerism.
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“Emotionally persuasive algorithms tailor content to maximize attention and influence user decisions” (Raffoul et al., 2023).
Explains how influence happens — algorithms manipulate behavior, which is a political and ethical issue.
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Shows influence is systematic and technical, not accidental.
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Raffoul, A., et al. (2023). Digital persuasion and youth vulnerability. Global Digital Health Journal.
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“Exposure to targeted online content is associated with behavioral and psychological shifts in adolescents” (Boer et al., 2024).
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Boer, M., et al. (2024). Adolescent digital exposure and behavioral outcomes. Journal of Youth Psychology.
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“Influencer marketing strongly affects teenage consumption patterns and self-presentation behavior” (Jincy & Enoch, 2024).
Shows social influence + emotional trust → strongest political concern because it bypasses transparency.
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Jincy, S., & Enoch, M. (2024). Influencer communication and teen behavior. Youth Behavior Review.