Thursday 3 November 2005

today I did not blog because...

I was busy writing this. It is an introduction to a forthcoming issue of the journal Information Polity, about the role of the Internet in the 2004 EP election (edited by Nick Jankowski and yours truly).

The Internet and the European Parliament Elections: Theoretical Perspectives, Empirical Investigations and Proposals for Research

Abstract
This article reviews the existing literature on the study of on-line aspects of elections along three well-rehearsed theoretical frameworks: equalisation vs. normalisation, information vs. engagement, and mobilisation vs. reinforcement. It then examines the contribution of this volume to the field, first by direct reference to existing literature, then more generally, touching upon the notion of the ‘comparative’ – theoretical, geographical and empirical. The article examines the contribution of the articles, considered as a collective effort, in relation to the increasing specialisation in the study of on-line aspects of elections. Then the framing of issues and the evidence presented within and across individual articles is used to assess the import of the internet for election campaigns with respect to increasing pluralism, professionalisation, and audience activity (or the lack thereof). It will be argued that this theme issue represents a first, necessary contribution towards gaining a crossnational understanding of the growing role of the internet for electoral practice. The last section further elaborates on possible future directions of online campaign studies, drawing on the study of the 2004 EP online election.

Keywords
Internet, elections, European Parliament, political communication, comparative research

If you are interested, you can download a copy of a draft here, before it is published. Then you're certainly better off with a paginated copy.

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