[Air-l] eCitizens Numbers - Research request, e-democracy abstracts link
Steven Clift
slc at publicus.net
Wed Nov 27 10:36:50 PST 2002
I recall at the AOIR conference in Minneapolis a handful of
presentations with juicy numbers about citizen perspectives on the
use of the Internet in community/government/politics. If this rings
a bell from that conference, your recent conference in the
Netherlands, or any of your work, drop me a copy of anything
appropriate:
clift at publicus.net
Below is a more specific list of questions that I am rushing to
answer. I should note that I am an "e-democracy" practitioner who
likes to build bridges between academics and e-democracy builders
around the world. Keep me informed and I'll credit your work if I
use it in one of my many speeches (hundreds across 25 countries thus
far).
Also, I released a compilation of abstracts from the APSA
conference on DO-WIRE yesterday:
http://www.mail-archive.com/do-wire@tc.umn.edu/msg00574.html
I am looking for more abstract sources as well.
eCitizen Numbers
Next week I'll make a presentation to a foundation(s) titled the "Eye
on the eCitizen." I am currently scouring the net and my contacts
for the following things (expanded from my do-wire note linked
above):
- general statistics that illustrate that citizens become engaged
when they "think it matters" or when they "think it will influence
the
outcome"
- general breakdown/population estimates of the types of citizens -
such my own framework:
+ active citizens (vote always, active in governance/community)
+ informed citizens (follow the news, vote mostly)
+ passive citizens (sometimes vote, avoid political news)
+ disengaged citizens (rarely vote, news? what's that)
- what people do online in general - time spent doing X, visiting Y
- any studies about user habits in their e-mail boxes versus web
surfing
- usages trends related to political/media/government sites
- what people say they want in terms of political/governance
information and services online and how they actually use such
information/services currently and related trends
- any numbers demonstrating a change in page views following
usability improvements on government/political/media web sites
- any numbers that help create a baseline related to e-democracy
- any online usage trends related to the recent elections anywhere
My goal is to help layout a framework for strategic involvement in
e-democracy. Based on what we know, what can we do between elections
with
online tools and political/community involvement and what
opportunities
might exist in future elections. That is my goal.
Anything related to above would be most helpful:
clift at publicus.net
Thanks,
Steven Clift
http://www.publicus.net
Democracies Online Newswire
http://www.e-democracy.org/do
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