Qualitative Political Communication| To Implement or Not to Implement? Participatory Online Communication in Swiss Cities

Authors

  • Ulrike Klinger IPMZ Institute fo Mass Communication and Media Research, University of Zurich
  • Stephan Rösli University of Zurich
  • Otfried Jarren University of Zurich

Keywords:

participation, social media, local democracy, Switzerland

Abstract

Social media platforms and other digital interactive media hold great potential for political communication. This study explores perceptions about this potential and the motivations to adopt participatory tools and assesses both motivations and challenges that local administrations face in the process of technology adoption for political communication. Switzerland is a critical case for local communication, because, on the one hand, media structures, media usage patterns, political culture, and legal regulations make it likely to find high levels of participatory online communication. On the other hand, the formalized participation opportunities of direct democracy may undermine the potential of online participation. Our analysis, based on interviews and document analysis, addresses the implementation of participatory online communication from the theoretical perspectives of rational choice and neoinstitutionalism. We found diffuse rather than specific motivations, role conflicts, frictions between informal online participation and formal decision-making processes, and low demand and resonance from citizens to be important challenges to the implementation of online participation.

Author Biographies

Ulrike Klinger, IPMZ Institute fo Mass Communication and Media Research, University of Zurich

Senior Research & Teaching AssociateAffiliation University of Zurich 

Stephan Rösli, University of Zurich

Researcher

Otfried Jarren, University of Zurich

Professor

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Published

2015-06-01

Issue

Section

Special Sections