For many years now we have witnessed the developing use of the internet and associated technologies by political actors and organisations. Claims and counter claims have been made as its suitability as a tool to help in the struggle to re-invigorate political participation in democracies across the globe has been contested.
This book charts the shifting sands of political activity in the digital age. It interrogates the hybrid nature of modern politics as online and offline actions blur the boundaries of traditional politics between real-life co-presence and the booming virtual domain of politics. By so doing, it critically reflects on the latest scholarship on the subject while concurrently advancing stimulating new insights into it. Encapsulating both the range and the diverse velocities of change in different political arenas and geographical locations, this volumes seeks to map out a path if not towards the politics of tomorrow then towards a better comprehension of the politics of today.
Featuring a range of international and comparative case studies presenting research on the UK, US, Italy, France, Spain, Romania, Africa and China, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Politics and Media, Political Communication, New Media studies, Public Administration, Sociology, Communication Studies, Computing and Information and Communications Technologies.
1. Taking stock: A Meta-Analysis of the Virtual Public Sphere in
Communication Journals
2. The Internet and the Decline of Euro-American
Democracy
3. The Semi-Sovereign Netizen: The Fifth Estate in China
4. New
techniques, new mobilizations? French parties in the Web 2.0 era
5. Do ethos,
ideology, country and electoral strength make a difference in cyberspace?
Testing an explanatory model of parties websites
6. Why Fix It When Its Not
Broken? Continuity and Adaptation in Romanian Presidential E-campaigning
7.
Online Party Politics: Studying the presence of some African political
parties on the Internet
8. Extreme Right Organizations and Online Politics: A
Comparative Analysis on Five Western Democracies
9. Ourselves Alone (but
making connections): The social media strategies of Sinn Fein
10. City Hall
2.0? Italian Local Executive Officials Presence and Popularity on Web 2.0
Platforms
11. Making democracy work online? Interpreting the web presence of
Italian regions
12. MEPs online: Understanding communication strategies for
remote representatives
13. Unaffiliated Socialization and Social Media
Recruitment: Reflections from Occupy the Netherlands
Paul G. Nixon is Principal Lecturer in Political Science and Head of Research at the Academy of European Studies and Communication Management at The Hague University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands.
Rajash Rawal is Principal Lecturer in Political Science at the Academy of European Studies and Communication Management at The Hague University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands.
Dan Mercea is Senior Lecturer in Politics and European studies at The Hague University, The Netherlands.