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Going offline

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Domagoj Bebi , Marijana Grbe a, MSc Faculty of Political Science University of Zagreb Going offline How online initiatives revive offline civic engagement – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Going offline


1
Going offline
Domagoj Bebic, Marijana Grbeša, MSc Faculty of
Political Science University of Zagreb
  • How online initiatives revive offline civic
    engagement

2
Identity
  • Two perspectives
  • I (individual identity) psychological
    constructs/influences of social interaction
  • We (collective identity)

3
Collective identity
  • Shared definition produced by several interaction
    individuals who are concerned with the
    orientations of their actions as well as the
    field of opportunities and constraints in which
    their actions take place (Mellucci, 1989)

4
Collective identity
  • Members of the Internet community continually
    work to reincorporate their experience of
    themselves and of others selves into integrated,
    consistent wholes
  • Presumption of an offline identity which
    continues to live offline is a precondition for
    discussion that person pursue his/her interests
    and causes which continue to exist both in
    virtual and physical world

5
Erosion of Social Capital (Putnam)
  • Dissolution of community
  • Decline in membership of social groups and
    voluntary associations, and in many forms of
    collective political participation such as
    attending town hall meetings or working for
    political parties (Putnam 1995)

6
Erosion of Social Capital (causes)
  • Structure of US economy
  • Changes in the family
  • Growth of the welfare state
  • Emergence of television (alienation of people)

7
Crisis of Public Communicationpolitical
disengagement
  • Common practices in political communications as
    deployed by the news media and by party campaigns
    hinder civic engagement, meaning learning about
    public affairs, trust in government and political
    activism (Blumler and Gurevitch 1995, Rosen 1996)

8
Both concepts
  • If we agree that it is the engagement of citizens
    that provides the building blocks of successful
    democracy then concern them stems from both
    concepts is hardly surprising

9
New communication technologies
  • Appear to have opened up new spaces for public
    and private participation as well as broadened
    public participation in political matters

10
Virtual Communities
  • Individuals engage in online communication thus
    creating virtual communities
  • the social aggregations that emerges from the
    Internet when enough people carry on public
    discussions long enough and with sufficient human
    feeling to form webs of personal
    relationships(Rheingold)

11
Citizens reconnect
  • Interactivity as a key element to change the
    nature of citizens participation in politics and
    public life in general
  • Internet with a potential to restore public
    sphere providing forum in which citizens debate
    issues of public concern (Coleman Street)
  • Cyberspace as generating a new world order based
    on international communication and popular
    empowerment (Negroponte, 1996)

12
Basic conclusion
  • Reinvent community in cyberspace and political
    participation will follow (Chadwick, 2006)

13
Enabling View
Internet Group identity
Real world Group identity
Real world Group action
  • as medication for the perceived ills of modern
    society isolation, fragmentation, competitive
    individualism, the erosion of local identities,
    the decline of traditional religious and family
    structures and the downplaying of emotional forms
    of attachment and communication

14
Enabling View Two-folded solution
  • Internet is seen to have potential to engage
    people into public discussion about matters of
    common concern thus bringing politics back to the
    people and restoring public sphere Habermasian
    sense of reengagement

15
Enabling View Two-folded solution
  • Internet is believed to have capacity to restore
    broken social ties Putnams sense of
    reengagement

16
Disabling View (concerns)
  • The only functional community is the one based on
    a face-to-face communication (Putnam)
  • Poor quality of interaction between individuals,
    tendency to produce plurality of deeply segmented
    political associations

17
Examples
  • Move On (Habermas)
  • Meet Up (Putnam)

18
Move On
19
Move On
20
Meet Up
21
Meet Up
22
Examples
  • Both initiatives have clearly demonstrated
    capacity
  • provide a platform to elaborate the cause people
    can identify
  • build group cohesion strong enough to encourage
  • real action

23
Conclusion (Assumptions developed)
  • I. Online interactions in virtual communities
    have the potential to create group identity hence
    providing a source of content that has the
    capacity to transform virtual into physical
    communities.

24
Conclusion (Assumptions developed)
  • II. These virtually created and physical
    consumed communities have the capacity to induce
    public action and positively contribute to civic
    engagement

25
Conclusion
  • Presented initiatives have managed to deploy
    alternative communication channels to positively
    contribute to public engagement in both
    Habermasian sense and Putnams sense and that is
    a value per se

26
Avenue of future research
  • To closely examine the nature and the dynamics
    of these virtually created and physically
    consumed communities
  • Compare them to traditional real life groups
    and communities
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