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Campaigns
This page considers use of the net in campaigns by political
parties, individual candidates and advocacy groups.
It covers -
introduction
In Australia, as in most other countries, the most effective
use of the internet in political campaigns has been made
by advocacy groups and individual politicians rather than
than by major parties. The Australian federal election
during the past decade suggest that the parties essentially
haven't moved beyond static brochure-ware, ie they are
using sites as an opportunity to publish policy statements
rather than to engage with supporters and the wider community.
We'll be offering pointers about online campaign issues
and developments in the near future.
writing
Most of the best writing about use of the net is offline,
and indeed in journals rather than monographs or collections
of papers.
We've highlighted some of that literature on preceding
pages of this guide. Vote.com: How Big-Money Lobbyists
& the Media are Losing Their Influence, and the Internet
is Giving Power to the People (New York: Renaissance
1999) by Dick Morris has gained considerable attention
but for us is a rather silly, often cynical exercise.
It's from the author of The New Machiavelli (and
disgraced former Clinton advisor); the old Machiavelli's
more subtle and perceptive.
We recommend instead Dennis Johnson's intelligent No
Place For Amateurs (London: Routledge 2001), which
draws together recent thinking about principle and practice
in campaigns, The Winning Message: Candidate Behavior,
Campaign Discourse and Democracy (Cambridge: Cambridge
Uni Press 2002) by Adam Simon, Web Campaigning (Cambridge: MIT Press 2006) by Kirsten Foot &
Steven Schneider, New Media Campaigns and the Managed
Citizen (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni Press 2006) by
Philip Howard and On Message: Communicating the Campaign
(London: Sage 1999) by Pippa Norris, John Curtice, David
Sanders & Margaret Scammell. The former's written
for a US audience but many of Johnson's insights about
polling, targeted contact and web sites are applicable
to Australian politics. Jennifer Lees-Marshment's Political
Marketing & British Political Parties (Manchester:
Manchester Uni Press 2001) offers a UK perspective that
is of value in considering Australasian developments.
Elections in the Age of the Internet: Lessons from
the United States, a report (PDF)
Professor Steven Coleman of the UK Hansard Society's e-democracy
programme, asks 'why go online?'. The answer in the US
was provided by the web consultant for Hillary Clinton's
senate campaign: "If you don't put your campaign online,
someone else will." There are varied insights in The
Internet and eational elections: A comparative study of
web campaigning (London: Routledge 2007) edited by
Randolph Kluver, Nicholas Jankowski, Kirsten Foot &
Steven Schneider.
Michael Bassik's undergrad thesis
The Effectiveness of Political Advertising on the Internet
- Bridging the Political Digital Divide by Providing Campaigns
with the Tools, Information, and Resources to Begin Advertising
Online is thin but of interest for comments
on US ads, supplementing Peter Lenz' E-Voter 98: Measuring
the Impact of Online Advertising for a Political Campaign
(PDF)
and Bonchek's 1995 paper
Grassroots in Cyberspace: Using computer networks to
facilitate political participation.
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