A Time-Series, Multinational Analysis of Democratic Forecasts and Emerging Media Diffusion, 1994–2014

Authors

  • Jacob Groshek Boston University
  • Kate Mays Boston University

Keywords:

democratic development, Internet access, mobile phones, diffusion of innovations, ARIMA forecasting, time-series analysis

Abstract

In the last decade, the Internet has become more widely diffused and mobile, developing into a more interactive, globalized space with greater potential for democratic participation and mobilization. An earlier study by Groshek (2010) found that from 1994 to 2003, the Internet had limited national-level democratic effects, which suggested that Internet diffusion should not be considered a democratic panacea, but rather a component of contemporary democratization processes. Updating those analyses, this study used the same sample of 72 countries to examine the democratic effects of the Internet and mobile phones from 2004 to 2014 by replicating Groshek’s time-series statistical tests. This study also found very limited evidence that emerging media diffusion resulted in augmented democratization, with only four countries—Bhutan, Myanmar, Nepal, and Kyrgyzstan—demonstrating greater democracy levels than were statistically predicted. Within a framework of diffusion of innovations and demand for democracy, this study extends the current understanding of emerging media’s role in democratic development, and represents an important step in identifying the limited agency that emerging media diffusion has shown in cultivating democratic growth nationally.

Author Biographies

Jacob Groshek, Boston University

Dr. Jacob Groshek is an Assistant Professor of Emerging Media Studies at Boston University, where his research focuses on communication technologies and the ways in which the structure, content and uses of online and mobile media may influence sociopolitical change at the macro (national) and micro (individual) levels.  Related to these pursuits, his body of work also includes applied econometric analyses, such as time-series and panel models that link democratic change with media diffusion and social media content. He earned his Ph.D. at Indiana University in 2008 and has since published more than 30 peer-reviewed articles, including pieces in Journal of Communication, New Media & Society, Social Scientific Computer Review, and the International Journal of Communication, among others. He has previously held academic appointments at Iowa State University, Erasmus University Rotterdam (The Netherlands), the University of Melbourne (Australia), and was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse (France). 

Kate Mays, Boston University

Doctoral Student in Emerging Media Studies 704 Commonwealth Ave.Boston University Chelsea CutinoGraduate Student in Emerging Media Studies704 Commonwealth Ave.Boston University

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Published

2017-01-27

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Section

Articles