Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns

Data-driven campaigning has become a feature of political campaigns around the world. There is growing evidence that political campaigners at the elite and grassroots level believe that data matters for electoral success. This belief is having important consequences for the way that political campai...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Katharine Dommett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society 2019-12-01
Series:Internet Policy Review
Online Access:https://policyreview.info/node/1432
id doaj-6a73ad14ca1b44b6bb8fbda4e2994dd6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6a73ad14ca1b44b6bb8fbda4e2994dd62020-11-24T21:22:24ZengAlexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and SocietyInternet Policy Review2197-67752019-12-01Volume 8Issue 410.14763/2019.4.1432Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaignsKatharine Dommett0University of SheffieldData-driven campaigning has become a feature of political campaigns around the world. There is growing evidence that political campaigners at the elite and grassroots level believe that data matters for electoral success. This belief is having important consequences for the way that political campaigns are being performed. However, in practice, data-driven campaigning does not take a single form and there are very different practices in the way data is being used. These variations matter because they have different democratic implications. Whilst some uses of data may be viewed as permissible, others can raise democratic concerns. This article casts light on a diversity of different data-driven practices evident in campaigns by offering a theoretical account of the different ways in which data can be used. Discussing three factors that characterise the activities of political campaigners, this article demonstrates variations in who is using data in campaigns, what the sources of campaign data are, and how data informs communication. Reviewing the landscape of data-driven campaigning within political parties, and drawing extensive analysis of the UK case, this article presents categories that can be used to map campaign practice and identify activities to which regulators may wish to respond.https://policyreview.info/node/1432
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katharine Dommett
spellingShingle Katharine Dommett
Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
Internet Policy Review
author_facet Katharine Dommett
author_sort Katharine Dommett
title Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
title_short Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
title_full Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
title_fullStr Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
title_full_unstemmed Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
title_sort data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
publisher Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
series Internet Policy Review
issn 2197-6775
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Data-driven campaigning has become a feature of political campaigns around the world. There is growing evidence that political campaigners at the elite and grassroots level believe that data matters for electoral success. This belief is having important consequences for the way that political campaigns are being performed. However, in practice, data-driven campaigning does not take a single form and there are very different practices in the way data is being used. These variations matter because they have different democratic implications. Whilst some uses of data may be viewed as permissible, others can raise democratic concerns. This article casts light on a diversity of different data-driven practices evident in campaigns by offering a theoretical account of the different ways in which data can be used. Discussing three factors that characterise the activities of political campaigners, this article demonstrates variations in who is using data in campaigns, what the sources of campaign data are, and how data informs communication. Reviewing the landscape of data-driven campaigning within political parties, and drawing extensive analysis of the UK case, this article presents categories that can be used to map campaign practice and identify activities to which regulators may wish to respond.
url https://policyreview.info/node/1432
work_keys_str_mv AT katharinedommett datadrivenpoliticalcampaignsinpracticeunderstandingandregulatingdiversedatadrivencampaigns
_version_ 1725995966012588032