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Presidential Campaigning in the Internet Age
0 - Default Title
Description
Citizen involvement in the campaign historically has been and, as this book shows, continues to be a means to an end: winning the election for the candidate. For all the proliferation of apps to download, polls to click, videos to watch, and messages to forward, the decidedly undemocratic view of controlled interactivity is how most campaigns continue to operate.
Contributing to the field a much-needed historical understanding of the shifting communication practices of presidential campaigns, Presidential Campaigning in the Internet Age examines election cycles from 1996, when the World Wide Web was first used for presidential campaigning, through 2012, when practices were being tuned to perfection using data analytics for carefully targeting and mobilizing particular voter segments. As the book charts changes in internet communication technologies, it shows how, even as campaigns have moved responsively from a mass mediated to a networked paradigm, and from fundraising to organizing, the possibilities these shifts in interactivity seem to promise for citizen input and empowerment remain much farther than a click away.
Product details
Binding:
Paperback
Edition:
1
Number of Pages:
240
Release Date:
2014-01-30
Publication Date:
2014-01-30
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
0199731942
ISBN13:
9780199731947
Weight:
375 g
Height:
156 cm
Width:
233 cm
Thickness:
20 cm
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