A Paradox Theory of Social Media Consumption and Well-Being

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Dublin Core

Title

A Paradox Theory of Social Media Consumption and Well-Being

Subject

Discussing how social media is affecting children.

Description

Social media has impacted child well-being in paradoxical ways. Yet, our understanding of this paradox remains piecemeal. To address this gap, this conceptual article endeavors to delineate the interplay between child well-being and contradictions associated with social media consumption and the ways to manage these contradictions. Using paradox theory, we develop a theoretical framework that explains the relationships and dynamics surrounding conflicting demands between empowerment and protection and the cyclical responses to paradoxical tensions involving social media that are affecting child well-being. Using this framework, we offer a collection of propositions to stimulate further research on the empowerment–protection paradox and a set of mediating pathways to manage paradoxical tensions arising from social media consumption and promote children’s well-being in the digital era.

Creator

Sheau-Fen Yap

Source

N/A

Publisher

Australasian Marketing Journal

Date

January 12, 2023

Contributor

Weng Marc Lim

Rights

N/A

Relation

N/A

Format

N/A

Language

English

Type

N/A

Identifier

N/A

Coverage

N/A

Website Item Type Metadata

Local URL

https://journals-sagepub-com.libproxy.unl.edu/doi/full/10.1177/14413582221139492

Citation

Sheau-Fen Yap, “A Paradox Theory of Social Media Consumption and Well-Being,” Archive of the Present, accessed March 14, 2025, https://strundle.createunl.com/omeka/items/show/175.

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