Stephen Ward
London School of Economics and Political Science
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In: Gibson, R. K., R�mmele, A. and S. J. Ward, editor(s). Electronic Democracy: Political Organisations, Mobilisation and Participation Online. London: Routledge; 2004. p. 1-16. | 2004
Rachel K. Gibson; Andrea Römmele; Stephen Ward
Electronic Democracy analyses the impact of new information and communication technologies (ICTs) within representative democracy, such as political parties, pressure groups, new social movements and executive and legislative bodies. Arguing for the validity of social perspective in theory building, it examines how representative democracies are adapting to new ICTs. It features a number of comparative studies focusing on the UK, the US, Sweden, Germany, Korea and Australia.
Archive | 2014
Laura Sudulich; Matthew Wall; Rachel Gibson; Marta Cantijoch; Stephen Ward
In this introduction, we outline our understanding of the ‘political Internet’ and present the methodologically focused approach that we take to the topic in this volume. We then discuss the growing social and political relevance of the Internet and examine the characteristics of the contemporary ‘Web 2.0’ Internet, before outlining the general methodological challenges and opportunities that it presents for researchers. We argue that three key characteristics of online political information in the Web 2.0 era shape and constrain any study of the political Internet. These characteristics are (1) extremely large volume, (2) heterogeneity and (3) plasticity. We contend that this combination creates what we term a ‘dynamic data deluge’ for social scientists, which makes distinguishing and recording meaningful information generated by the political Internet a methodologically challenging endeavour. We then discuss how the chapters collected here attempt to make sense of the dynamic data deluge that the political Internet presents. In the course of doing so, we build a picture of what distinguishes social media from earlier types of digital communication and discuss how social media content can be assimilated and processed by social science. We touch on epistemological concerns arising from this discussion before outlining the structure of the book and providing details of the individual contributions.
Archive | 2003
Rachel K. Gibson; Stephen Ward
In: Holli Semetko, Margaret Scammel, editor(s). The Handbook of Political Communication. Sage; 2012.. | 2012
Rachel Gibson; Stephen Ward; Holli Semetko; Margaret Scammel
Archive | 2008
Stephen Ward; Rachel Gibson
Archive | 2003
Paul G. Nixon; Stephen Ward; Rachel K. Gibson
Archive | 2002
Rachel K. Gibson; Wainer Lusoli; Stephen Ward
In: Gibson, R. K. and Ward, S. J, editor(s). Reinvigorating Democracy: British Politics and the Internet. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate; 2000. p. 9-26. | 2000
Rachel K. Gibson; Stephen Ward
London: Routledge; 2004. | 2004
Rachel K. Gibson; Andrea Römmele; Stephen Ward
London: Routledge; 2003. | 2003
Rachel K. Gibson; Stephen Ward; Paul G. Nixon