Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage

The importance of social media in the national discourse is increasing but little is known about their true effects on political communication and participation. The paper examines how the Icelandic political parties used social media during the campaign for the 2013 general elections and possible i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baldvin Þór Bergsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Iceland 2014-12-01
Series:Stjórnmál og Stjórnsýsla
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.irpa.is/article/view/1597
id doaj-f708abca0f774cd9b4c7c66e92e6118c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f708abca0f774cd9b4c7c66e92e6118c2020-11-24T21:41:03ZengUniversity of IcelandStjórnmál og Stjórnsýsla1670-68031670-679X2014-12-0110234136810.13177/irpa.a.2014.10.2.81341Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usageBaldvin Þór BergssonThe importance of social media in the national discourse is increasing but little is known about their true effects on political communication and participation. The paper examines how the Icelandic political parties used social media during the campaign for the 2013 general elections and possible influence of the electorate. Data from the Icelandic National Election Study was used to examine a possible link between political interest and participation. International studies are used as a reference since Icelandic studies on the subject are limited, and a theoretical overview of the nature and effect of social media is provided. The findings of this paper are that social media was primarily used as a one-way communication tool and that interaction between parties and the electorate was limited. Facebook is by far the most important social media due to its spread and easiness to send information to a large group. The study does not find evidence for the claim that voters had much effect on the campaign through social media nor that social media affected the election results. People with much interest in politics are more likely to use the internet to receive information from the parties.http://www.irpa.is/article/view/1597SamfélagsmiðlarFacebooklýðræðinetlýðræði.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Baldvin Þór Bergsson
spellingShingle Baldvin Þór Bergsson
Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage
Stjórnmál og Stjórnsýsla
Samfélagsmiðlar
Facebook
lýðræði
netlýðræði.
author_facet Baldvin Þór Bergsson
author_sort Baldvin Þór Bergsson
title Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage
title_short Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage
title_full Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage
title_fullStr Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage
title_full_unstemmed Political parties and Facebook: A study of Icelandic political parties and their social media usage
title_sort political parties and facebook: a study of icelandic political parties and their social media usage
publisher University of Iceland
series Stjórnmál og Stjórnsýsla
issn 1670-6803
1670-679X
publishDate 2014-12-01
description The importance of social media in the national discourse is increasing but little is known about their true effects on political communication and participation. The paper examines how the Icelandic political parties used social media during the campaign for the 2013 general elections and possible influence of the electorate. Data from the Icelandic National Election Study was used to examine a possible link between political interest and participation. International studies are used as a reference since Icelandic studies on the subject are limited, and a theoretical overview of the nature and effect of social media is provided. The findings of this paper are that social media was primarily used as a one-way communication tool and that interaction between parties and the electorate was limited. Facebook is by far the most important social media due to its spread and easiness to send information to a large group. The study does not find evidence for the claim that voters had much effect on the campaign through social media nor that social media affected the election results. People with much interest in politics are more likely to use the internet to receive information from the parties.
topic Samfélagsmiðlar
Facebook
lýðræði
netlýðræði.
url http://www.irpa.is/article/view/1597
work_keys_str_mv AT baldvinþorbergsson politicalpartiesandfacebookastudyoficelandicpoliticalpartiesandtheirsocialmediausage
_version_ 1725923425650737152