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Exploring the Role of Political Discussion for Online Political Participation

Informal political discussions that encourage participants to learn more about topics through active informational exchanges with others are considered staples of healthy democratic societies. The body of research relating to the dynamics of these online exchanges, including on political blogs, has continued to grow as the public’s usage has increased. One key question relates to the factors — both online and offline — that spur digital political dialogue.

A 2011 study from the University of Texas at Austin and Catholic University of Chile published in the International Journal of Public Opinion Research, “Society Networks that Matter: Exploring the Role of Political Discussion for Online Political Participation,” surveyed 1,159 U.S. adults about their online and offline political practices between November, 2008, and January, 2009. The researchers focused on network size and composition, level of partisan agreement and argumentation, and degree of offline political engagement.

Key study findings include:

The researchers conclude that weak ties “appear to be a key ingredient of discussion networks that mobilize citizens to participate in politics online. In contrast, discussion network attributes [considered] essential for promoting citizen engagement, such as reasoning, seem to be far less consequential, at least for Internet-based political participation.”

Tags: Facebook, campaigns and media, social media

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By December 12, 2011

Campaign Media , Citizen Action , Digital Democracy , Internet , Social Media