Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects

Communications scholars recognize two related trends in twenty-first century politics: the rise of information and communications technologies promising major changes in civic participation and a growing disconnection between citizens and their governments. The coexistence of these trends raises som...

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Main Author: Hennigan, Sean Christopher
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-12-4657
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-12-46572015-09-20T17:05:43ZActive citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projectsTypology for evaluating online civic participation projectsHennigan, Sean ChristopherNew mediaCivic participationArnsteinLadder of participationInternetDeliberationCommunications scholars recognize two related trends in twenty-first century politics: the rise of information and communications technologies promising major changes in civic participation and a growing disconnection between citizens and their governments. The coexistence of these trends raises some interesting questions about the role of ICTs for enabling new forms of civic participation. How can new technologies better enable civic participation? This report proposes a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects that allows researchers to analyze the goals, designs, and outcomes of particular projects. The typology also incorporates Arnstein’s (1969) ladder of citizen participation in order to enumerate the relationships between the project’s goals and its outcomes and to provide a flexible model for understanding the democratic conceptualizations manifested in particular projects. The report analyzes three online civic participation projects, highlighting their innovations and discussion their levels of citizen participation. The analyses suggest that a project’s goals, designs and outcomes are related to, and inform, its desired and realized levels of citizen participation. The review also suggests clarifications to Arnstein’s ladder for future use in understanding online civic participation. The report’s evaluative typology can aid in the interpretation of past online civic participation projects and guide the conceptualization and implementation of future projects in order to facilitate the development of more direct connections between citizens and governments and more open and transparent democratic governance structures.text2012-02-22T21:37:55Z2012-02-22T21:37:55Z2011-122012-02-22December 20112012-02-22T21:38:02Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-12-46572152/ETD-UT-2011-12-4657eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic New media
Civic participation
Arnstein
Ladder of participation
Internet
Deliberation
spellingShingle New media
Civic participation
Arnstein
Ladder of participation
Internet
Deliberation
Hennigan, Sean Christopher
Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
description Communications scholars recognize two related trends in twenty-first century politics: the rise of information and communications technologies promising major changes in civic participation and a growing disconnection between citizens and their governments. The coexistence of these trends raises some interesting questions about the role of ICTs for enabling new forms of civic participation. How can new technologies better enable civic participation? This report proposes a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects that allows researchers to analyze the goals, designs, and outcomes of particular projects. The typology also incorporates Arnstein’s (1969) ladder of citizen participation in order to enumerate the relationships between the project’s goals and its outcomes and to provide a flexible model for understanding the democratic conceptualizations manifested in particular projects. The report analyzes three online civic participation projects, highlighting their innovations and discussion their levels of citizen participation. The analyses suggest that a project’s goals, designs and outcomes are related to, and inform, its desired and realized levels of citizen participation. The review also suggests clarifications to Arnstein’s ladder for future use in understanding online civic participation. The report’s evaluative typology can aid in the interpretation of past online civic participation projects and guide the conceptualization and implementation of future projects in order to facilitate the development of more direct connections between citizens and governments and more open and transparent democratic governance structures. === text
author Hennigan, Sean Christopher
author_facet Hennigan, Sean Christopher
author_sort Hennigan, Sean Christopher
title Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
title_short Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
title_full Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
title_fullStr Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
title_full_unstemmed Active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
title_sort active citizen participation online : a typology for evaluating online civic participation projects
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-12-4657
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