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[ecrea] PhD studentship available at Northumbria University
Sun Mar 01 12:15:46 GMT 2015
An International Study of the Impact of New Technologies on Political
Communication
Fully-funded (£14k pa) PhD studentship available at Northumbria
University (Department of Social Sciences) in Newcastle-upon-Tyne to
start in October 2015
The Internet and other new technologies (smartphones, social media, Web
2.0, etc.) are revolutionising political communication (e.g. during
election campaigns). Traditionally, politicians and their political
parties devised a set of election campaign themes and messages and
conveyed these to the electorate, or particular sections of the
electorate, via advertising on billboards, in newspapers, and on radio
and TV. In addition, they enlisted an army of canvassers to go door to
door, posted out election flyers and other campaign materials, targeted
swing voters by telephone and concentrated their resources on key
marginal constituencies. More sophisticated election campaigns utilized
commercial geo-demographic systems such as Mosaic, or developed their
own (i.e. the Conservatives’ Voter Vault and Labour’s Contact Creator),
in an attempt to reach particular categories of voter. The essential
point is that such election campaigns were centrally-organized and
top-down and they attempted to connect with the electorate as a
collection of aggregated individuals.
Contemporary politicians and political parties, by contrast, are using
the Internet and other new technologies to deliver decentralized and
personalized election campaigns that connect with voters as individuals.
Having been pioneered by Barack Obama in the United States (US)
Presidential Election in 2008, and having been finessed during the 2012
Presidential Election, modern election campaigns are utilizing big data
mining (i.e. algorithms) to construct detailed and sophisticated
profiles of individual voters; huge data banks and supercomputers;
multiple digital platforms; real-time experiment-informed programmes, to
test the efficacy of campaign messages, in addition to the traditional
focus groups and survey method; micro-targeting; social media, etc.
Furthermore, using apps on smartphones, plus other technologies,
canvassers on the streets and coordinators at campaign headquarters can
engage in a constant and two-way process of data collection and data
retrieval about individual voters – as the Obama team so effectively
demonstrated in 2012. Modern election campaigns are thus more dynamic
and responsive than traditional ones.
While the 2010 General Election was described as the first Internet
election, Britain is arguably engaged in a process of technological
catch-up with the US. Nevertheless, the recruitment of former members of
the Obama campaign team by the Conservative and Labour parties for the
2015 General Election, namely Jim Messina and David Axelrod
respectively, suggests that British election campaigns are also in the
process of being transformed as techniques such as big data mining,
micro-targeting, personalized messages and real-time experimentation are
imported and applied. This PhD project is original in four senses:
(a) It will compare recent election campaigns in the US, Britain and
elsewhere to ascertain whether there is a general trend to emulate the
evolving US model. Furthermore, it will explore what effect differences
in national political, media and legal systems have had on the use of
such techniques outside of the US.
(b) It will break new ground by going beyond the existing literature,
which predominantly focuses upon technological capabilities, to
investigate the impact of such techniques on citizen’s privacy, issues
of awareness and informed consent, and digital exclusion.
(c) It will break new ground by generating, for the first time,
empirical British data about these effects of these techniques on voter
mobilization and voter preferences.
(d) It will investigate what the use of such techniques – involving as
they do issues of commercial confidentiality and personal data
protection – means for the academic study of elections and political
communication more generally.
Mullen, A. (2013) ‘Selling Politics: The Political Economy of Political
Advertising’ in C. Wharton (Ed.) Advertising as Culture, Bristol: Intellect
Mullen, A (forthcoming) The Battle for British Hearts and Minds on
Europe: Anti- and Pro-European Propaganda, 1945-2015, London: Bloomsbury
For more info see
https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/research/postgraduate-research-degrees/research-degrees/
Dr Andy Mullen, Senior Lecturer in Politics
(andrew.mullen /at/ northumbria.ac.uk)
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