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User as Citizen 9 October 2006
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Signing up for Meetings Meet before Fall Break 30 minutes Both Team Members Thursday this week to Wednesday next week Thursday 8:30-11, 2:30-5:30 Friday 2-5:30 Monday 11-11:30, 2-3, 4:30-7:30 Tuesday 12-1, 5-7:30 Wednesday 11-12, 5:30-7:30 Pick a time and sign up now
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Tuesday Programs Enabling Technology What is the fundamental question? Not whether it helps people Gattaca Interplay of technology and societal values
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Rest of the semester How technology impacts society Citizen Consumer of information Consumer of products Producer
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e-Government Key premise of democracy: informed electorate Free education for all Freedom of the press Two factors More information Deliberative democracy New England town meetings Communication and discussion
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Reaching out to Younger Voters How important is this? Is it really different today? Reaching them where they are Facebook Small group discussion (handout)handout
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How to Get the Conversation Going Organizations and web sites Deliberative Democracy e.thePeople What works? Messages and media Involvement and empowerment
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The Issues What would make you more involved? More government information? Contact with government officials? Why don’t more people vote? Disenfranchised? Time? Disillusionment?
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How is the Internet changing people’s information base? How Americans Get in Touch w/Gov't (July 2003 Pew survey) How Americans Get in Touch w/Gov't 97 million adult Americans used e-gov in 2003 77% of Internet users web sites or emailing government officials 50% growth from 2002 Citizens still more likely contact government officials by telephone or in-person visits 54% of Americans contacted government 53% used traditional means
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Is it increasing participation? Effects of Net Use on Political Participation (2003 NSF report) Effects of Net Use on Political Participation Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) strategic plan (2010 safety strategy) web-based discussion in parallel to a traditional docket August 2000 – February 2001 100 contributors, 102 messages to docket. 516 messages to discussion board 116 contributors, 339 messages 177 messages contributed anonymously 130 additional individuals registered and monitored the discussion 6,750 visitors viewed and downloaded moth before comments due Conclusion: Internet did expand the breadth of voices in the decision- making process
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Do users seek both sides of the debate? The Internet and Democratic Debate (October 2004 Pew Report) The Internet and Democratic Debate Conclusion: Internet users are being exposed to both sides of the issue Also correlated with educational level, interest in the campaign and age 2004 presidential election Those with a preference for one candidate or the other were more likely to be aware of the different sides of the issue Of those with a preference 43% omnivores (know both) 29% selective reinforcers (know candidate they support) 21% tuned outs (know little) 8% contrarians (know candidate they oppose)
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Did internet use make a difference in the 2004 presidential race? Internet Impact on 2004 Election (March 2005 Pew report) Internet Impact on 2004 Election The most successful campaigns relied on it to gain advantages over their competitors. Howard Dean Broad Use 37% of adults and 61% of online Americans (75m) used the internet to get political News consumers 18% -> 29% Primary source 11% -> 18% Of Internet users 52% (63m) got news or information 39% (43m) discussed politics (though jokes were very high) 11% (13m) engaged directly What will these numbers be in 2008?
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And what about this year? Seek news about midterm elections (September 2006 Pew report)Seek news about midterm elections “On a typical day in August, 26 million Americans were using the internet for news or information about politics and the upcoming mid-term elections. That corresponds to 19% of adult internet users, or 13% of all Americans over the age of 18.”
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