Transcript Milano-2012

Barbara Pfetsch
Beispielbild
Democratic Potentials of Online Communication for
Political Debate
Presentation at the International Summer School for Political Communication
and Electoral Behavior,
Milano, July 16-18, 2012
Political Communication and Media Change
- explosion of channels and avenues for
(political, commerical, social …..) communication
- speed and new issue dynamics
- feedback loops and interactive communication
- convergence of mass media and digital communication
venues
media effects research must be reconsidered
new potentials for political communication
(campaign, democratiziation, political debate …)
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Starting Point of Reflection
Democratic Potentials of Online Communication for Political Debate
 criteria = inclusiveness and access for broad range of actors
Mass mediated public sphere:
„cumulative inequality“ (Wolfsfeld 1997)
low representation and difficult access for civil society actors („challengers“)
„ Is the internet a better public sphere?“
Under what conditions can online communication
•
make up for the deficits of traditional media?
•
contribute to the enhancement of democratic political
debate?
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Outline
I Inclusiveness and democratic potential of online communication:
Expectations and doubts
II Interactions between old and new media as critical link
The Chadwick approach of a Hybrid Media System
III Consequences for research
Interaction between online and offline media as field of inquiry
IV Pathways of empirical research to assess the interaction
of new and old media and its impact on democracy
V Conclusion
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Democratic Public Sphere
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What creates the democratic potentials of the internet?
-
open access for everybody
unlimited carrier capacity
availability of information
interactivity
co-presence of horizontal and vertical communication
Indefinite reservoir of actors and issues
Threat to the gate-keeping role of traditional mass media
Access for challengers
Incusiveness: Capacity and space for networks of new
communicators, coalitions and issue networks
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Empirical Findings
Comparisons between online and print media debates
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The Hybrid Media System
This interplay between online and offline media leads to a hybrid
media system which is “build upon interactions among old and
new media” in contemporary politics and society.
It is the “outcome of power struggles and competition for
preeminence during periods of unusual transition,
contingency, and negotiability” (Chadwick, 2011).
Political Media Effects through
the Hybrid Media System?
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The Hybrid Media System
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Desiderates of Political Communication Research
-
Conditions of Political Media Effects in the Hybrid Media System
Dynamics
-
of Agenda Building
Nature and Mechanisms of Spill-Over between Online and
Offline Media
(a) direct Spill-Overs (Baringhorst 2008)
(b) Online Media Spill over (Huffington Post, etc.)
(c) Double-campaign focused spill-over
Context Conditions
that make a particular type of spill-over more
or less likely
Research Designs and Methodology?
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Possible Context Conditions of Spill Over Effects
 Nature of online and offline communication
– Specific types of issue coalitions and online networks (strongly
connected actors, high frame strengths, frame sponsors);
– Particular (left or right) media at the receiving end;
 Macro Level factors which shape the online-offline dynamic
 issue characteristics (e.i. connection to larger conflics, established vs.
latent issues;
– country characteristics (pluralist countries vs. corporatist countries;
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Challenges of the Research Design
onlinecommunication of
challengers
1.
Analysis of issue specific communiction networks
 challengers build and act in coalitions
(≠ single blog/webpage)
2. When and under what circumstances do we find
spill-overs?

nature of the issue

media and political context of countries
 type of communication network
media/political
debate
3. Evaluation of online-communication

democratic potential (accessability, inclusion)
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Methodological Challenges
Online
Offline
webpage selection:
•Google
•experteninterviews
•literature
text selection:
print media
network selection
issue crawler, web crawler,
spider software
internet: challengers’ issue
networks
networkanalysis
frames & issues on the
agenda
content
analysis
contentanalysis
regression & time series
analysis
causality?
level of data analysis?
Spill-over
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Conclusion
The internet as such does not automatically bring about a more
inclusive, a more accessible and therefore more democratic
public debate;
The democratic potentials of the internet seem to depend on the
interaction of old and new media and spill overs between them;
The hybrid media system opens up new opportunities for challengers
and may be more inclusive;
The mechanisms and varieties of interaction between old and new
media are a desiderate in political communication research which
requires innovative studies and new methodologies.
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