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[ecrea] cfP: Digital politics: Collective action born in and from the Internet
Wed Nov 10 20:18:35 GMT 2010
CfP Panel at the 6th ECPR General Conference, 25-27 August 2011 in
Reykjavik, Iceland.
Panels: Digital politics: Collective action born in and from the Internet
Section: Internet and Politics: Bridging Current Research and
Outlining Future Directions
Panel chairs: Johanna Niesyto, University of Siegen and Mayo Fuster
Morell, European University Institute.
Discussant: Sigrid Baringhorst, University of Siegen
So far, political science research has focused on the use of the
Internet by collective political actors that had their main
operational base in the offline realm. First studies on the Internet
and politics mainly concentrated mostly on well-established and
traditional actors such public administration and political parties.
Then the cope of research widened to include interest groups, NGOs
and social movements looking at the impact of the Internet and the
type of Internet use carried out by those groups. In particular,
given the growing importance of political campaigns and other forms
of collective action that are launched and carried out by networks
of political actors, that mainly, if not completely operate and
mobilize for their issues online, the debate on the Internet and
politics could benefit further from considering actors who mainly
operation with an online base. Interestingly, the emergence of
collective action in online environments apparently follows new
forms of action and collaboration that are said to be different from
political actors with a mainly offline base. The panel "Digital
politics" aims to iniciate a discussion on the main organizational
and democratic logic of the collective action born in and from the
Internet addressing questions such as: What are the main
characteristics of participation in online base collective action?
How are boundaries drawn between the individual and the collective
in such forms? How can we deal with the dialectics of
individualization on one hand and the effects of de-personalization
on the other hand that are inscribed in online spaces? How is the
online space governed and how does its architecture structure online
interaction? Finally, which methods are best suited to analyze the
practices and dynamics of collective action online adequately?.
Abstracts with a maximum of 500 words should be upload by 1 February
2011 at the ECPR website: https://www.ecprnet.eu/myecpr/login.asp
You can contact the panel chairs at Mayo Fuster Morell
<(mayo.fuster /at/ eui.eu)> and Johanna Niesyto <(Johanna.Niesyto /at/ uni-siegen.de)>.
Further information on the panel at the conference is available at:
http://www.ecprnet.eu/conferences/general_conference/Reykjavik/panel_details.asp?panelid=517
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