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Patrick B. O'Sullivan,
Ph.D. |
| Research | Service |
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O’Sullivan, P. B. (1995). Computers and political participation: Santa Monica’s teledemocracy project. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 23, 93-107.
New
communication technologies have been touted as a way to improve political
participation by facilitating the flow of political information and opinion
between citizens and their leaders. A project in Santa Monica, California,
broke new ground for teledemocracy experiments with Public Electronic
Network (PEN), the first government-sponsored computer network intended
as a supplemental channel of communication between a city government and
citizens. This paper examines how computer networks in general, and PEN
in particular, match the ideals of teledemocracy through a descriptive
and historical analysis of Santa Monica's Public Electronic Network. "Populist"
uses of communication technology, such as electronic town halls in which
information control remains centralized for the politically powerful and
citizen feedback is restricted, are seen as less true to teledemocratic
ideals that "pluralist" uses, in which information control is diffused
and citizen involvement is facilitated. This analysis concludes that interactive
computer networks are well suited for facilitating pluralistic political
participation. In addition, PEN's hardware and software design is are
well suited for accomplish teledemocratic goals of early and continuous
participation in policy formation and decision-making processes of local
government. Possible extensions of this analysis of PEN are discussed.
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| Copyright
© 2004 Patrick B. O'Sullivan All rights to all original materials on this site retained. Last Modified January 13, 2005 |