Abstract
This article focuses on how, why and with whom local politicians engage on Facebook. Based on a literature review of the public sphere, eParticipation and research related to social media, we propose a theoretical framework that identifies thematic areas integral to understanding the nature of political participation. The explanatory potential of our ‘ENGAGE’ model (Exchange, Narcissist, Gather, Accented, General and Expense) is exemplified by conducting a qualitative case study focusing on politicians in a local municipality in southern Norway. The findings indicate various uses of Facebook among the respondents, and a dissonance between what the politicians state as being important (engaging in dialogue with citizens) and what they really do (posting statements). We conclude our paper by discussing the use and usefulness of our proposed model, and by summarising how, why and with whom local politicians use social media.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Hong, S., Nadler, D.: Which candidates do the public discuss online in an election campaign?: The use of social media by 2012 presidential candidates and its impact on candidate salience. Government Information Quarterly (2012)
Linders, D.: From e-government to we-government: Defining a typology for citizen coproduction in the age of social media. Government Information Quarterly (2012)
Sæbø, Ø., Rose, J., Skiftenes Flak, L.: The shape of eParticipation: Characterizing an emerging research area. Government Information Quarterly 25, 400–428 (2008)
Westling, M.: Expanding the public sphere: The impact of Facebook on political communication. The New Vernacular (2007)
Habermas, J.: The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. MIT press, Cambridge (1991)
McGrath, K., Elbanna, A., Hercheui, M., Panagiotopoulos, P., Saad, E.: Exploring the Democratic Potential of Online Social Networking: The Scope and Limitations of E-Participation. Communications of the Association for Information Systems 30, 16 (2012)
Medaglia, R., Rose, J., Nyvang, T., Sæbø, Ø.: Characteristics of social networking services (2009)
Päivärinta, T., Sæbø, Ø.: Models of e-democracy (2006)
McAfee, A.P.: Enterprise 2.0: The dawn of emergent collaboration. Management of Technology and Innovation 47 (2006)
Yin, R.K.: Case study research: design and methods, 4th edn. Sage Publications, Newbury Park (2009)
Kirsch, L.J., Beath, C.M.: The enactments and consequences of token, shared, and compliant participation in information systems development. Accounting, Management and Information Technologies 6, 221–254 (1996)
Cavaye, A.L.M.: Case study research: a multi-faceted research approach for IS. Information Systems Journal 6, 227–242 (1996)
Silverman, D.: Interpreting qualitative data. Sage Publications Limited (2011)
Gentikow, B.: Habermas, medienes rolle for den offentlige meningsdannelsen, og en fotnote om Internettet i fire versjoner. Norsk Medietidskrift 1, 55–63 (2009)
Habermas, J.: Political communication in media society: Does democracy still enjoy an epistemic dimension? the impact of normative theory on empirical research1. Communication Theory 16, 411–426 (2006)
Geiger, R.S.: Does Habermas understand the Internet? The algorithmic construction of the blogo/public sphere. Gnovis: A Journal of Communication, Culture, and Technology 1, 1–29 (2009)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 IFIP International Federation for Information Processing
About this paper
Cite this paper
Rustad, E., Sæbø, Ø. (2013). How, Why and with Whom Do Local Politicians Engage on Facebook?. In: Wimmer, M.A., Tambouris, E., Macintosh, A. (eds) Electronic Participation. ePart 2013. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 8075. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40346-0_7
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40346-0_7
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-40345-3
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-40346-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)