Social Media and Civic Engagement. Scott P. Robertson

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Social Media and Civic Engagement - Scott P. Robertson Synthesis Lectures on Human-Centered Informatics

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      Semiotic Engineering Methods for Scientific Research in HCI

      Clarisse Sieckenius de Souza and Carla Faria Leitão

      Common Ground in Electronically Mediated Conversation

      Andrew Monk

      Copyright © 2018 by Morgan & Claypool

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.

      Social Media and Civic Engagement: History, Theory, and Practice

      Scott P. Robertson

       www.morganclaypool.com

      ISBN: 9781627053945 Paperback

      ISBN: 9781627053952 PDF

      ISBN: 9781681733166 Hardcover

      ISBN: 9781681733470 ePub

      DOI 10.2200/S00836ED1V01Y201803HCI040

      A Publication in the Morgan & Claypool Publishers series

       SYNTHESIS LECTURES ON HUMAN-CENTERED INFORMATICS, #40

      Series Editors: John M. Carroll, Penn State University

      Series ISSN: 1946-7680 Print 1946-7699 Electronic

       Social Media and Civic Engagement

       History, Theory, and Practice

       Scott P. Robertson

      University of Hawaii at Manoa

       SYNTHESIS LECTURES ON HUMAN-CENTERED INFORMATICS #40

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       ABSTRACT

      Social media platforms are the latest manifestation in a series of sociotechnical innovations designed to enhance civic engagement, political participation, and global activism. While many researchers started out as optimists about the promise of social media for broadening participation and enhancing civic engagement, recent events have tempered that optimism. As this book goes to press, Facebook is fighting a battle over the massive disclosure of user information during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, social analytics company Cambridge Analytica is being revealed as a major player in micro profiling voters in that same election, bots and fake news factories are undermining democratic discourse via social media worldwide, and the president of the United States is unnerving the world as a stream-of-consciousness Twitter user.

      This book is a foundational review of current research on social media and civic engagement organized in terms of history, theory, practice, and challenges. History reviews how researchers and developers have continuously pushed the envelope to explore technology enhancements for political and social discourse. Theory reveals that the use of globally-networked social technologies touches many fields including political science, sociology, psychology, media studies, network science, and more. Practice is examined through studies of political engagement both in democratic situations and in confrontational situations. Challenges are identified in order to find ways forward.

      For better or worse, social media for civic engagement has come of age. Citizens, politicians, and activists are utilizing social media in innovative ways, while bad actors are discovering possibilities for spreading dissention and undermining trust. We are at a sobering inflection point, and this book is your foundation for understanding how we got here and where we are going.

       KEYWORDS

      social media, civic engagement, social capital, digital cities, smart cities, urban informatics, digital activism, protest

      Contents

       Preface

       Acknowledgments

       1 Introduction

       1.1 Technology and the Public Sphere

       1.2 Civic Engagement

       1.3 Social Media

       1.4 Organization

       2 History

       2.1 Digital Cities

       2.2 E-Government Portals

       2.3 Open Government

       2.4 Smart Cities, “Civic Tech,” and Urban Informatics

       2.5 Hyperlocal Social Media

       2.6 Summary

       3 Theory

       3.1 Public Sphere

       3.2 Social Capital and Civil Society

       3.3 Networked Self and Context Collapse

       3.4 Uses and Gratifications

       3.5 Agenda Setting and Framing

       3.6 Structuration

       3.7 Actor-Network Theory

       3.8 Information Diffusion

       3.9 Summary

       4 Engagement

       4.1 Political Participation

       4.2 Candidates, Politicians, and Political Parties

      

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