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The Dark Side Of Online Participation

Exploring Non-, Passive And Negative Participation

Overview

Studies on the ‘second-level digital divide’ explore the socio-economic antecedents and effects of (a lack of) user participation on the Internet. At the same time, some have criticized a normatively affirmative bias in online participation research as well as a one-sided focus on observable user activity. This contribution addresses the ensuing call for a more nuanced understanding of online participation in general, and online political participation in particular. We differentiate the online participation concept based on a focus group study among 96 Internet users from a broad range of social backgrounds in Germany. We derive a framework of eight types of online (non-)participation along three conceptual axes: activity, agency, and social valence. Taking user experiences and terminology into account, we differentiate participation from non-participation, active from passive and positive from negative (non-)participation. The proposed typology allows for a more balanced evaluation and more focused exploration of phenomena such as destructive or involuntary online participation as well as online abstention, boycotts, self-censorship, lurking, or digital exclusion

ISBN
Category Construction and technical details
Call number HN49C6 L88 2017
Physical description 24 pages:24 cm.
Edition year 2017
Bibliographical references? Yes
Publisher name N/A
Publication year 2017
Place of publication N/A
Language English
Is series? No

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