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Getting closer: The effects of personalized and interactive online political communication

Political parties and politicians increasingly use the possibilities of the Internet to communicate interactively with citizens and vice versa. The Internet also offers opportunities for individual politicians to profile themselves. These developments are often said to bring politics closer to citiz...

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Published in:European journal of communication (London) 2013-02, Vol.28 (1), p.53-66
Main Authors: Kruikemeier, Sanne, van Noort, Guda, Vliegenthart, Rens, de Vreese, Claes H
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c507t-e097d8d41f8f43c4b749ff5c5bf36d74d14b07bbd9cf1161d9d485e638860ec53
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container_title European journal of communication (London)
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creator Kruikemeier, Sanne
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description Political parties and politicians increasingly use the possibilities of the Internet to communicate interactively with citizens and vice versa. The Internet also offers opportunities for individual politicians to profile themselves. These developments are often said to bring politics closer to citizens, increasing their political engagement in politics. Empirical evidence for such claims is, however, scarce. In a scenario experiment and a laboratory experiment using real-world websites, the authors examine whether more personalized online communication (a focus on individual politicians) and the use of interactive features increase political involvement among citizens. The results from both studies demonstrate that both highly interactive and personalized online communication do increase citizens’ political involvement. Moreover, it was also found that political personalization positively moderates the effect of interactivity on political involvement, meaning that the effects of interactivity are even stronger in a personalized setting.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Library & Information Science Abstracts (LISA); Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sage Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Citizen Participation
Citizens
Communication
Communication research
Customization
Experiments
Information communication
Interactivity
Internet
Laboratories
Participation
Personal power
Political Communication
Political Participation
Political Parties
Politicians
Politics
Technology adoption
Websites
title Getting closer: The effects of personalized and interactive online political communication
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