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Comparing Online and Offline Political Participation:

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Presentation on theme: "Comparing Online and Offline Political Participation:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Comparing Online and Offline Political Participation:
Revisiting Key Debates in a Socially Networked Era Shelley Boulianne (with Yannis Theocharis and Karolina Koc-Michalska)

2 Overview of Presentation
Discursive Engagement Canadian Election Study Participatory inequality Political discussion as a gateway Summary Social media & political participation (and digitally networked participation) offer a distinctive story What is online participation? Methodological meta- analysis of current measures Key debates Proposed typology/taxonomy Institutionalized, protest, community participation etc. Digitally networked participation

3 What is online participation?

4 What is online participation?
Analysis of 50+ studies on “participation” Most studies combine multiple measures into a single aggregate measure Focus on discursive activities* Survey questions with MOST frequent listed first 1 Contact government official or political candidate* 2 Sign online or petitions 3 Donate to a campaign or political cause 4 Visit campaign websites & search for political information 5 Sign up to volunteer/did online volunteer work for a campaign 6 Sent a political message via /text/messaging service to family and friends* 7 Create or been involved in online political or civic group 8 Persuade others to participate/vote/change political views* 9 Participate in online discussion about politics or news* 10 Organize or been involved in online protest/boycott 11 Contact newspaper editors online*

5 What is online participation?
Potential Problems: Inclusion of passive activities, such as info searching vs. classic definitions of political participation - attempt to influence (Verba & Nie, 1972)

6 What is online participation?
Potential Problems: Combining civic and political activities Donating to campaigns vs. charities

7 What is online participation?
Potential Problems: Combining institutionalized and non-institutionalized activities Signing petitions is combined with donating to campaigns

8 What is online participation?
Key debates: Which online political activities constitute political participation? Are online political activities distinctive from their offline counterparts? Should dimensions (classes/factors) of participation distinguish between online and offline activities?

9 What is online participation?
Key debates: Are Web 1.0 political activities distinct from Web 2.0 (or socially networked) activities?

10 What is online participation?
Key debates: Should there be a continuum or participatory ladder within each dimension (class/factor) of participation?

11 Proposed typology Gibson & Cantijoch (2013) typology

12 Proposed typology Types of participation: Voting
Consumerist participation (boycotting/buycotting) Institutionalized participation Community participation Protest participation Digitally networked participation

13 Proposed typology Types of participation: Voting
Consumerist participation (boycotting/buycotting)

14 Proposed typology Types of participation:
Institutionalized participation, such as Donating online to a political party or campaign Donating offline to a political party or campaign Encourage others (offline) to donate to… Encourage others (online or social media) to donate to…

15 Proposed typology/ Types of participation:
Community participation, such as Donating online to a non-profit/charity Donating offline to a non-profit/charity Encourage others (offline) to donate to… Encourage others (online or social media) to donate to…

16 Proposed typology Types of participation:
Protest participation, such as Signed a petition in paper Signed an online petition Encouraged others to… Participated in a march or street demonstration Participate in a strike

17 Proposed typology Types of participation:
Digitally networked participation, such as Shared/retweeted a political post from your friends/political party/political group Commented on a political post from your friends/political party/political group Joined on social media a special group that is defending a social or political cause

18 Discursive Engagement

19 Discursive Engagement
Political discussion is important, because It is a gateway activity/first step on the participatory ladder Widely accessible and popular (Deliberative) talk important to identifying one’s political preferences/interests

20 Discursive Engagement
Political discussion is used to illustrate Trade-offs of combining activities across modes in terms of participatory inequality How different modes have different impacts on more intense forms of participation

21 Discursive Engagement CANADA
Canadian Election Study, Post-election survey 2015 In the past 12 months, 52% of respondents spoke in person about a public issue with someone you know 67% of respondents said they used social media at least one day in the past week Of social media users, 40% of respondents used social media to discuss political or public issues with people you do know

22 Discursive Engagement CANADA
Findings Largest groups: do not talk in either mode (n=1045) and talk in both modes (n=926)  CANADA n=4169 Do not use social media Use social media, but never talk politics on social media Use social media and talk politics at least once Never talk politics offline n=766 n=1045 n=187 At least once talk politics offline n=604 n=615 n=926

23 Discursive Engagement CANADA
Findings Gender and age-based differences in modes of political discussion Offline political discussion Do NOT use social media Social media political discussion  Direction Sign Direction  Sign  Female=1 Positive ** Negative *** ns Age Education Political interest

24 Discursive Engagement CANADA
Findings Political discussion on social media has strong effects on petitions & marches Stronger than offline discussion Significant selection effects Partial Correlations vote petition march Offline talk .045** .244*** .188*** Non-user ns Negative*** Social media talk .038* .335*** .290***

25 Discursive Engagement FRANCE
France survey, April 2017, n=1500 In the past 12 months, 86% of respondents talked offline about political issues 75% of respondents said they have a social media account (Facebook or Twitter) Of social media users, 34% of respondents used social media to talk about political issues

26 Discursive Engagement FRANCE
Findings Largest group: do not use social media & talk politics offline (n=1149)  France, n=1500 Do not use social media Use social media, but never talk politics on social media Use social media and talk politics at least once Never talk politics offline n=376 n=131 n=16 At least once talk politics offline n=1149 n=630 n=372

27 Discursive Engagement FRANCE
Findings Gender and age-based differences in modes of political discussion Offline political discussion Do not use social media Social media political discussion  Direction Sign Direction  Sign  Female=1 Positive * ns Negative Age ** *** Education Political interest

28 Discursive Engagement FRANCE
Findings Political discussion on social media has strong effects on petitions & marches; stronger than offline discussion Partial Correlations vote petition march Offline talk .089** .101*** .076** Non-user ns Negative** Social media talk .030 .326*** .298***

29 Discursive Engagement BOTH
Summary across two countries Gender and age-based differences in modes of political discussion Offline political discussion Do not use social media Social media political discussion  Direction Direction  Female=1 Women more likely to talk politics offline Age Older people more likely to be non-users Younger people more likely to talk politics on social media

30 Discursive Engagement BOTH
Summary across two countries Political discussion on social media has strong effects on petitions & marches; stronger than offline discussion, controlling for gender, age, education, and political interest Partial Correlations vote petition march Offline talk Non-user Social media talk Partial correlation of approx. .33*** Partial correlation of approx. .29***

31 Discursive Engagement BOTH
Discussion Combining modes blurs the gender and age-based differences in modes of political discussion Political discussion is a gateway for all activities Mode of discussion matters. Social media discussion is important for protest participation (petitions, marches).

32 Summary of Presentation
Discursive Engagement Gender and age-based participatory inequality Strong correlation of social media discussion & petitions/marches Summary Social media offers a distinct story about participation What is online participation? Tendency to aggregate into a single measure Focus on discursive activities Proposed typology/taxonomy Blur modes of participation for some dimensions Digitally networked participation is distinct


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