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Participation in Political Organisations in the United Kingdom and the Internet, 2001-2003
Creator
Ward, S., University of Salford, European Studies Research Institute
Lusoli, W., University of Salford, European Studies Research Institute
Gibson, R. K., University of Salford, European Studies Research Institute, Centre for Contemporary History and Politics
Study number / PID
5094 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-5094-1 (DOI)
Data access
Restricted
Series
Not available
Abstract
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This project evaluated the use of the internet by political organisations (parties, interest groups, trade unions and new social movements) to promote participation in two dimensions:
increasing vs. decreasing participation: examining whether the internet will increase rates of political participation and attract new citizens into the political process, or lead to greater marginalisation and exclusion of existing non-participants;
enhancing vs. reducing the quality of participation: analysing whether electronic participation increases political interest and efficacy, enhances elite accountability, or, due to the impersonal nature of online communication, it reduces the significance of participation.
Overall the research contributed to debates about social inclusion and exclusion in political participation and the role and health of political organisations in the UK. In particular it assessed what types of political organisation are best suited to exploiting the new media.
Objectives:
to develop established theoretical models of political participation by incorporating the role of technology in mobilising citizens;
to establish how far the internet is used by political organisations to promote political participation;
to develop a new methodology to operationalise and measure the participatory aspects of political organisations' web sites;
to create a series of new data sets;
to provide guidelines for the most effective usages of new ICTs by political organisations to promote participation.
Implications:
theoretical: the research updates models of participation and democracy; and sheds more light on the social shaping vs. technological deterministic approaches;
empirical: an over time assessment of the attitudinal and behavioural orientation of the UK public towards electronic participation; a benchmark for assessing further innovations;
methodological: methodological innovations such as...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
01/01/2001 - 01/01/2003
Country
England, Europe, Great Britain, Multi-nation, United Kingdom
Time dimension
Cross-sectional (one-time) study
the study contains a panel element; the content analyses of the web sites of 29 political organisations were collected at four data points in the course of 18 months.
Analysis unit
Institutions/organisations
National
Universe
Members and supporters of: trade union GPMU; Labour Party; Liberal Democrat Party and the Countryside Alliance; Age Concern activists; British political organisations and IT departments; British adults aged 15 plus. Although the responses were connected with Britain, some of the respondents were from outside Britain.
Sampling procedure
No sampling for online surveys; one-stage stratified or systematic random sample for postal membership surveys; multi-stage stratified random sample for the public opinion survey; purposive selection/case studies for content analysis and interviews
Kind of data
Text
Numeric
Data collection mode
Face-to-face interview
Postal survey
Self-completion
Funding information
Grant number
L215252036
Access
Publisher
UK Data Service
Publication year
2005
Terms of data access
The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the End User Licence Agreement.